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\

.

The Daily- Sentinel

By The Bend

Bulls,
Suns ·
post wins

l'l*tday, May 4, 1993

Pige 10

Community Calendar
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT • Revival, Mid·
dleport Community Chureb, Pearl
S1n:et, through Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
Different sing~rs 11nd preachers
nighlly. Public invited.

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:

620

Pick 4:
3.875
Buckeye 5:
2-17·25·32-37

Page6

Thursday, 2 a.in. to noon. Sponsmd by EleanOr Circle.
POMEROY • Pomeroy Lodge
No. 164 F&amp;AM, Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. RefresluileniS.

·POMEROY - F.O.E. Ladies
TUPPERS PLAINS - Orange
Auxiliary No. 2171, mother-daugh- Township Trustees, Wednesday,
ter banquet, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. 7:30p.m., home of the clert, Patty
Officers elected. new meJDbers ini· , Calaway.
•
tiated.
THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers
CHESTER • Pomeroy OES
Chapter No. 186, Tue~Jj, 7:30 Plains VFW Post No. 9053, Thurs· day, 7:30p.m., installariM of offi·
p.m., Cheslt.r Masonic B . . g.

·e

,

Vol. 44, NO. 5

, · · ~P

or.

~. BONORS - 31

EMPLOYEIS roR

S~·

VICE •
Jl Crall Slralfcil"d, M.D-.•Prl!lldellt ol Holler Clinic,
aad Rollert E. Daniel, Clinic AdmiDI&amp;trator, receatly boaored 34
Holzer Clinic employees who reached employment milest011es. The
luncheon meeting was held at ..e Holiday Inn. Each year Holzer
Clinic honors those employees who)lave reached a five-year . .
plateau in their career. Honored this year were: 25 years • Nancy
Dowen; 20 years • Roy Kincaid, Carol.McDaniel, Frances Mullias,
Juanita Noe, David Reymond, Evel)'ll Sw,aln and Jackie Wallen. 15
years- • Nancy Dye, Gladys .Eis. .ugle, Shirley En·gle, Karen
McCall, Dawaa Parsons and Lynn Rult.lO years • Shel DaWS!Jn,
Conni.e D~umm011d and Ann Wicklinel 5 • years • Joan Anderson,

Laura BobbiDI, Faye Boaecutter, Lori Bardette, Haria Elltller,
Randy Fllk.IDI, Etha Hann•, Jen ~Nancy MaUias, Phyllis
Pope, Jeaa Sammons, Russ Slulw, Saady Saedepr, Jane Stoat
Charlotte ThompiiCID, Vldd Wilcox and Pat Woolam. Dr. Slralford
thanked tbe employees ror their years ol dedbtion. He tllid "It Is
great to be here to honor yoa who have served Holzer Clinic ror ao
long • it 1,1 dedicated people like you wbo make the Clinic su_.
rut, who make ..e medical prOia~lon rewardlna and l'uD. Holler
Clinic is a dynamic aad progressive orpnlzation." He roncluded,
"It is made that way throuall your dedication and bard work • you
are the power behind tbe organization."

•"

Wahama
alumni
plans set

•
•

I

I

CHESTER SCIENCE FAIR· Top winners
· at the annual scleace fair ror fourth, firth and
sixth grade students at Chester Elemeatary are,
l·r, Angle Wolfe, in the area or buman body;
Chad Nelson, Ia the area or eartb scieace; Jos•
Will, In tbe area or ph:ysical · scie~c;e; and Jeuny

'

Long, in the area of lire BCience. They were rec·
ognlzed with plaques presented by scieace tea~:h·
er, Steve JewelL The plaques were _purchued
with a coo.trlbutlon from the Meigs Couaty Lit·
ter Coalrol Ollke.
·

No wonder health care is in such a mess

Outstanding Meigs
students honored

RACINE · American Legion
PQ!It 602, Racine, Thursday. Supper, 6:30p.m. Eleclion of officers.

..

~

~

Plans are being finalized for the
Wahama Alumni Association
annual banquet and dance to be
held May 29 at the Moose Lodge in
Point Pleasant, W.Va. . Reunion years are ~rraduatin~r
classes that end with 1~"3" or "8.,;
These classes will be seated at spe·
cia! tables and honored guests are
class members of 1943 lmd 1993.
The "Renew Acquaintance
Hour" will begin at 5 p.m. with
dinner to begin at 6 p.m. The din·
ner of steak, chicken, potatoes,
vegetable, salad, rolls, coffee, tea
a!ld dessert will be provided by the
Moose.
After the recognition of classes,
a short business meeting will be
held aild door prizes awarded. All
dues collected will be .:flied to

WEDNESDAY
. REEDSVILLE · Olive Township Trustees, Wednesday, 7:30
p.m., Shade River State Forestry
Building.
MIDDLEPORT · Heath United
Methodist Chun:h, spring tummage
sale, Wednesday. 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.,

--

MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
Chapter No. 172, OES, Middlepon,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Honoring of ·
25-year members and presentation
of 25-year pins. Ofricers were .
chapter dresses.

School, Julie HUI, Southern Hiah School, and
Jeremy Jackley, Easten Hlgb Scllool, wefe presented plaques by Jobn Riebel, Meigs Coanty
superintendeat or Schools, at Tuesday night's

RACINE • Free community
immunization clinic, Racine Fire
Department, Thursday, 9-11 a.m.
and 1-3 p.m., ages two months
through kindergarten age. Parents
bring child's immunizalion record.

V
_oters OK 47.7 percent
·o f school money issues

Southern registration set
Bring your child's birth Ccrtifi;
cate, social security card and
irntnunization leCOI'd to the kinder,
garten when you register ·~our
child.
Your child should have had four
OPT,
three Polio, one MMR, and
Sentinel.
one TB skin test before entering
school. The school nurse will be
eligible to attend ldndergartcn dur- present at registration to answer
queStions that you may have about
lng the 1993-94 school year.
The following information immunization requirements.
\'our child's hearing; speech,
about kindergarten regisaation may
'physical and language abilities will
be helpful to parents:
. Call Southern's kindergarten be assessed by trained school peroffice at 949·2664 between 8:30 sonnel. Parents will receive infora.m . and 3:30 ~ . II) . Monday mation about their child's perforthrough Friday to arrange for an mance in areas that are assessed ·
appoinunent to register'your child.
Registration and screening for
new kindergarten students in the
Southern Local SchoQI Di.n:t will
be Thursday and Friday, not Tues·
day and Wednesday as stated in
Monday's edition of the Daily

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - .
Voters approved S7 percent of dial have obtained---~
Voten approved -47.7 petcenl"of m IJIOP(liCII rea1 estll!1ilt 1Mes -loans Iii offset projected blidget
197 sc;hool district money issues in to provide money for school oper·
districts winDing
.
.
Tuesday's election, a tally by the aling expenses.
Ohio Department of Education
However, only four of 17 pm- were Bucyras. Clawford
showed today.
posed school district incOme taxes, OlenlaaJ!Y. Delaware Coaaty;
The passase rate was the lowest or 24 ~rcent, w_ere approved to Louloo~Pary. A# ' Coanty; Bettsville, Seneca Coaaty;
since May 1990, when 47.2 percent cover daily openumg costs.
of the issues were approved, but
Districts approving income Logan Elm, Picltaway Couaty;
was within tbe typical range for taxes were Licking Valley, Licking Minerva, Start &lt;;ounty; and
spriag elections lhat
about half County; Covington, Miami County; Mar.rheD , SunwaitCOidy.
At least OllC dislril:t. Abun. is
the measures passed.
Fremont, Sandusky County; and
expected
to be.fOICell to sect a
"That's about normal," said Bettsville, Seneca Coumv.
Slate-bacw
toao ror \be 1ft time
Among the closest outcomes ·
James Van Keuren, an assistant
after
defeat
of
a 7.7 mil levy.
state superintendent of public was a $4.4 million bond issue in
Akron
Supcrinteadcnt
Terry
the Danbury district of Ottawa
instruction.
Grier
said
the
distria
facal
a SIS
" It's still not as high as we County that won by three votes,
would like, but it still filS the ranl!e with four absentee baiiOIS still to be million deliciL
"I doo't know if people don't
that had been there over the last counted.
five years," Van Keuren said. "It
School money measures were believe us or just can't lfford .it,"
would be nice if we could hit the approved in acven of 17 districiS Grier said after the defeaL
SS percent range and above."

defier!;

~~:!rsJosc:~;~~ing· =~~ old~~~~ ~.~~mf:

Practice

oE~hul•

on H11clachl,

Neck &amp; S.Ck Pain

o8portelnjlir1111Car Accldentl
oMo.t lnaUI-1 .......

.-

~ ~L
• ,

do

J
•

•

Dr. II. R 101M • Dr. II. W. Aoblolaon ·

992-2168
Mon.·Wed..frL
1:00 Lfti...:CIO p.m.
T~. 1:00 Lm.-1:00

.

.

He stressed t.he important of
always looking forward, accepting
ehallenges, and mainl8ining the
right !lllitude
He congratulated the 63 bon.
oRCs on their academic accom.
plisbments, and then 10ld them that ·
·while they are "there" now, soon
they will be "has been 's" as the
cycle repeats itself and the challei!aa to excel continue.
., llill.B•rt)&amp;r. WoMeuy auperY!SOI' ~the Meigs County superiatcndeol' s office, emceed the pro-

p.u wlticb f~ a sreat dinner
served 10 tbe hoaot~. their families.Sa-s.
.
The bigblight was the recogni.
tioa l!ld praealation of bop.'lies to
63 llonorees, the top scholars in
Meigs County's schools, In pies
roar. six, eigbt, 10 and 12. Bill
Quictel, president of the Meigs
a.tly Iliad of Education, assisted by ~olm Costanza, elemenWy
supe! ' ' " · presealed the trophies.

PRESENTED TROPHIES • Slxty·tbree hil!b ac.lewers in
Meigs County schools were recognized and presented trophies at
the couaty's aanual Academic Excellence Banquet beld at Meigs
Higb School Tuesday night. Here Brandi Codner, a fourth grader
at Portland Elementary School, receives ber tropby from Bill
Qu!ckel, presldeut of tbe Meigs County Board of Education.
Qutekel was assisted in the presentalioitli by John Costanza, elementary supervisor. ..
·
'
--. - ,

•

w

.
I

• ~:'&lt;:' -·

.

--

_

The superintendents from each were noniinated for the Franklin B.
district, Carpenter from Meigs Walter Award by their respective
Local, Bob Ord froin Southern school districts. Recipient of the
Local, and Richard Roberts from
award was Allison Gannaway who
Eastern Local presented honored will go to Columbus next week for
sbidents from their respective dis· a recognition dinner.
lriCIS.
·
•Recogniz,ed were Meigs County
Also recognized and presented Board of Education members.
plaques were the outstanding Dohrman Reed, Bob Burdette, and
seniors, one from each district - . Harold Lohse, and board employ·
Allison Gannaway from Meigs ees, Kitty Hazier, talented and gift·
Local, Julie Hill from Southern ed coordinator. and Linda Haley,
Local, and Jeremy Buckley from
secretary, who assisted with the
Eastern Local, The three students batiq~et arrangements.

Voters approve Pomeroy levy
Pomeroy village's five-year 1.9 and 67 against the levy. ·
Only 250 of the 1,255 regismill Ievy ·ror c11rrent expenses ·
tered
voters in the village turned
pnrl by a large majority in Tuesout
to
vote oo the levy which was
day' s dectim
The vote was 181 for the 1evy, lhe the only issue on the ballot. It
passed by large majorities in all

three precincts.

The levy will generate approxi·
mately $32,000 a year and will be
used for sll'eet lighting which costs
!he v~ge about $30,000, accord·
mg 10 village officials.

Vehicles collide, damage light .

I

c..•••

v.,,.•aria_,

Jury selection continues .

·

=of

.

Neu!flann refused to concede,
and his ca.mpaign manager, Dick
Leggitt, said he would ask for a
recount. Some voters co~IBined
that ballot levers didn't w when
they tried to vote for Neumann
Leggitt said. Kenosha Count¥
Clyrk Nancy Principe said nobody
complained to her.

. Tractor incident reported

.-----Local briefs---------,

'

f"'"ll

MOUNT JAHORINA, Bosnia· had previously opposed the peace Jahoriaa is site of the 1984 SarajeHerzegovina (AP) - The Bosnian plan, l!ut have reversed their siiDCc vo Wiater Ol)'llllllcs.
Karadzic and Olher Sab lcadas
Sab leada' appealed today to hard· as Western al1iea incn:ued threats
called
for mdonement of the p1aa
line ~bly members 10 approve of military intervelltion.
BJ JOHN ROGERS
crafted
by U.N. envovs Cyrus
But the assembly of Bosnian .
resigning to jofn. President Clina U.N. peace plan war or pre~
Associaw
Press
Writer
ton's Cabioet.
·
.
Serbs,
many,
of
,them
!!e!l~Jerents
Vance
and
Lord
Owen
to
diride
for .Weslenl attacks.
.
It
was
a
draw
for
lhe
DemocraiS
Barca
had
55,578'
votes, or 50
hardened
by
a
year
of
tiabang
that
10
Bosnia-Herzcgoviua
into
" I implore you to ratify the
and
the
Rqi"Nica""
as
Ohio
voters
has
left
134,000
pcopfe
dead
or
provioces
split
bettma
the
Muspercent,
to
Neumann's
54,838
plan," Radovan Karadzic told
scm a former Pasb administration votes, or 49 percent. Three other
missing,
just
last
montll
unani·
·!im-led~0...-.1
the
members of Bosnia's self-declan:d
lawyer to tile House, while Wis- candidates split the rest of the vote
parliament in opening remarks . mously voted to reject the peace Bosnian Serbs. Only s.ajeoo, the
CO!ISia voters narrowly elected a in the district, which includes urban
would
be
joiutly
......
capital,
plan.
'Otherwise, the damage will be
De"••AiliO Sllcceed Defense Sec- Kenosha and rural portions of
It is not cerliin wbea the 77- tered.
enormous.''
.-y
Lcs Alpin In ConJress. .
southeastern Wisconsin.
Bosnia's SedJs oppose the plan
Serbian President Slobodan member ad hoc assembly meeting
Obio
Rcpablicla Rob Portman
mQ!Idy
because
it
fon:es
tbeal
to
for
two
days
in
the
Hea~y
Val'Mi1osevic also urged the assembly
a••• ed Den•er.or Lee Hmnberger
ley region of Mount Jallorina is to cede about 20 peu:eaa ofl..ts they
to paas the accord
011
Tuesday and 'Nill PK'ceed forBoth Karadl:ic an.! Milosevic make the final decision. Mount ~~ captured .the Jlllll 13 .........
mer
GOP
Willis Gradison
and bec•use they are 1111t &amp;UJMI·
. Rep.
....,
m18f...S
to
become
a lobbyist.
teed safe corridors for crawel
Roben G. Morris, Lighthouse
rmb8d
53,ln
votes,
or 70 Road, Racine, reported an incident
, between separate BOSlliu Serb ·
pcn:eat, to Hornberger's 22,685 to the Meigs County Sheriffs
regions.
waes,
or 30 pacenL
In response, the Uailed States
Detlanment on Saturday at noon.
Ia WiDXMIIin, Democratil; state
ll!d other allied fOn:&gt;es . _ dltat·Morris reported he was going
Rql...., lll!ta .... IlqJubliQn east on Route 338 near the John
ened air attw*s • Do-ita Serll
Lipt damage was incurred to two vehicles and lhe driver of one.
llltiUay·pneiricw, .......... •
Milt No
I for lite lfOuiC Hill Farm following his Farmall
was cited in an accident on West Main Street ~onday aft&amp; nooo.
Alpin held for 22 years before tractor and wagon. The tractor economic IIDttiou oa lite
According to a repon from Pomeroy Police this morning, Ralph
Yugoalava for bectiaallte rebel
being operated by Rodney Klein,
Hall, 73, of New Haven, W. VL puUcd his 1987 Chevrolet fiom a
Bmn• Sedtl ... dj. . . w SecPomeroy.
He Slll6d a hose busted
Skin
roadside farm ~t into the path of a 1979 Chevrolet driven by
tellry of Stile woq the tractor causing a cloud of
Orville Hill, 23, of Pomeroy. ,
.
011 a COI15'PI'W·pdlerilt&amp; 10!K of
Astin I til" clinic: will be con- Wiler vapor to blind him (Monis).
Hill was tallcn ~ the f&gt;omeroy Emergency Squad to Veterans
Eatqle..aP .
He then struclt tho wagon.
• Memorial Hospital wllere be was treated and refeascd. Hall was
"'' WI by er-ie Itaqcllait, R.N.,
Ru•a IOdly lllid it - ' d abo
Heavy damaae wu listed io the
Meip eo..ty Tub&amp;• aJoW Nurse,
cited b failure 10 yield.
·
·
coiUit troc1p1 to p, •keepiq
• t11e s,._ FR s • 011 Sill· W8801J and modena: to heavy damHill's vehicle had light damage to the p~ssenjeo: side, while dam.,....._ladle!·'
aae to 111e Croat eoc1 or his pickup
rn.. 11011110
2 p.m.
1180 to tile Hall car was to the driver's side front f611der.
•
.. beiDa
Miloteric:, wlto coetrola lite
truck.
.
clini&amp;:
•
...
_,.
led
..
media ia
Serllia
William B; Downie Jr., Morning ·
a COD'fC!Iiea far reaWnts
.s
11111o1c
..
I'
1
a
a
ScrStar
Road. Racine, ftiDOl'led 10 the
llia aailed ___ .._ __ lite
an 'it&amp; tile Syracue Play Day
Meigs
CQunty .Sheri1f's Depart•
f 1Miia. It ill aa CJ11P111bU10 time
I
ANy 1D ..... liar.,_.,
-r,Jill)' ldeodon: condnues today In tho ~~ty Court of
ment
thai
arouad midnight Saturfor W.fG&amp; a '' c Willi food ~er­
•'Remaittinl dm aada by die
COIIIIDW Pleas in thecaseofOidova. Willilm
• .
day
he
was
travelln&amp; aortb on ·
'rice 10 rcc:eite lbciflkln . . .
LeMuter, of Racine, is accused of four cbargu of aura~ · Serbian people llaft to be sohed
Routti
7
jut
north
or Fon:at Run
FDadl far tbciC clinn .-e pro~ aad .,. "' _ _.. llid
JDurdor in the Feb. g, 11191, Jboliun
Jeff~ Sr., 36,
Road
when
be
lbUCt
and .killed I
vided .... ...,. lite l!iiiii'CukJiillewy
. to_. 4i I
and 12-,.-oldJ-:= Jr~ both ofpolll
.
deer
that
ran
Into
tho
path of his
' aad tbae il110 charge far aay of
•'Tho 'Ole will lie wry clole
'l'llelday,llid Bnln Reed, a=-~
1992
Buick.
Ualldlmue
WUlilt·
· Sia JUIOII_.
dlewwi:ea.
for the .,.,.. CouniY PlclociiiD''t Offloe. ,.....,....... JL;.;
ed
.,
the
rn.
Of
his
vehicle.
.
llld iiiP'C A wMt,.. llid M• i'o
Partlteir illformatioa may bel
Moaday pculttlld.,.. CJPIIIIIIII ergwnenu In lhe - woald be&amp;ln . Kn,llalt. .... of ... - t l l y. &lt;b I I ~ 1ly CQDtacliaa tile Meias
On Tuesday moraini around
TIIUC!ay.
·
3:2.
5 a.m., Michael VaaMetcr,
. bllfote · - hi . . . . . . . . ilitill Comllf Tub&amp;~.,. omce • 992·
SyracUIC, reported be wu east3122.
... . c".U•• 'o6il• . a
c ~--------.:-----:--------:-~--;_

_.....

963 Gen. HILI'tinger Parkway
Middleport, Ohio 45760

~aneral

~~

..../'"'

CHIROPRACTIC
.
. CLINIC

anxiouS 10 see this face unknOwn to you're a networt.
them a week before.
Nonetheless, O'Brien made it
The gathering was also heavy clear that time is exactly what he'll
with NBC brass from both coasts. need. Claiming no magic formula
While the highly lilccsble O'Brien for putting on a talk show, and with
engaged in genial give-and-take almost no on-camera experience,
with reporters, his bosses may have he expects to rely on informed
dwelled on their own weighty con- trial,and-ermr.
cerns:
•'If somethin works, we'll keep
- How. well is this newcomer iL If somethi"- ~ 't wort, we 'fi
handling the press?
get rid of it, ' he said. "I think
- How well is he handling the we're going to have to find this '
pressure? .
.
thing gradually...
. ·.
cesser.
Once
he
goes
on
d!c
air,
how
..
Tbe setting was the lavish Rain·
Still, reporters pressed for
bow Room a10p Manhattan's G.B. . long do we give ~im to win .over . ready-made details, and O'Brien
Building ·- 59 stories above the viewers?
ag~eC~bly sugg~ potential sideBy the end of the session, the lcicks as Casey Kasem and Charlie
NBC studio Letterman will vacate
in June for CBS, and that O'Brien answers to· the first two questions Callas. He hinted at a oew feature:
were a cinch: Very well, and . very singing in his Irish ICilor with the
·will take over In late AuguS&amp;.
well
indeed.
··
Monday's affair included an
band. And he lfisclosed his pre:
As
fQr
that
last
matter, well, miere date: laler this very weet. ·He
open bar and caviar bon d'ocum:s, .
and it drew scores of reporters, · " time" is a four-lettei' word when was kidding about it all.
.· .
photographers and video crews

By CHAilLENE HOEFUCH
Seatiatl News Stall'
The cycle of accomplishments
in life and .the role of motivalion
and attitude were discussed by
James Calpenter, superintendent-of
the Meigs Local School District, at
Tuesday night' s annual Meigs
COD!Iiy Arademi&lt;: Excellence Ban:
qaet beld in the Meigs High cafetena.
The speaker related his comments to labels in three phases tbe .._.will be's", tboee will are
"there" and the "has been's". He
said tbat 10 be a "bas been" one has
to bave been "there" and that IlK
Ollly time it is bad to be labeled a ·
"never will be" is when one is sat·
isfied to remain there.
Qupentcr said that it Is "sad to
· lie a 'never was' but have had a
· -:-en
chance to be. ' there'; but never
.

Bosnian Serb assembly opens ,,,, .
with Peac~. appeal from Milosevic ·Democrat wins Aspin's Wisconsin
seat; Republican·elected in Ohio

Rejoicing Life honor roll

By FRAZIER MOORE
AP Televlsi011 Writer
NEW YORK - You thought
Conan 0 'Brien had a lock on that
"Lale Night" job.
Even so, he was called in fo r
another audition Monday.
This tryout took the form or a
news conference. his farst since the
30-year-old " Simpsons" and
"Sallltday Nighi Live" writer was
named as David Letterman's suc·

~

*

Plans rnad.e J.Or SAR COUJ.erence

O'Brien does his first show for reporters

· Academic Excelleace Baaq•t lteld at Meip
High ScltooL The * t t ~.....,;..led by titeir
respective scltool districts ror lite Fruklia B.
Walter Award. Wianer vi that award- AIJi.
SOD Gannaway.

OUTSTANDING SENIORS • Ttrese sealors
from tbe left, Alliaoa Gannaway or Meigs High

•
studenL
declared
bankruptcy.
Eighteen
The informal dance will be from
Dear Aaa Landers: I'm a
months
later,
I
discovered
he
had
9
p.m.
to I a.m. with music being
practicing dentist who is deeply
·forged
myname
on
a
check.
That's
provided
by "Party FactQry."
disiU!bed by the dishonesty I see all
when
1
walked
ouL ·
Alumni
requesiS
no alcoholic ~varound me. Almost every week, I'm
Af1a
our divorce, 1 hid trouble
erages ,dunng the banquet With
!ISiced 10 commit iiiiW1IICC fraud. Of
getting an apartnient because of !"Y
absolutely no undef!:~men per' AN!II LANDERS .
~. I ref~. but I wonder how
"1993, L01 AD&amp;eles
Jnnov crediL Now, my new husband
~!led in the dance. ,
many Olhen submit to the tempta- Ttm
-•
Due to fue marshal s cod~. the
.. Syndlcate
tion.
Crtaton Syndic:Me''
and I can't qualify for a loan. rve Moose Lod(!e has limi~ seating
Ooe patient asked me to use his
insisted that be not place me on any so early ucket purchases are
brother's insurance card number.
checlcing or savings IIIXlOWits so that. requested. 'i1Ckets are on ssle now
&amp;
&amp;
Another asked me to write a
I hope )'IU letlt:r and my responSe my rotteD credit record doesn't at Peoples Bank in Point PleasanL
New Haven and Mason, W.Va.;
prescription in his name since he was will serve as a warning to !hose who · tarnish his.
Tell "Michigan" to hold onto her Fruth Pharmacy in ·Middleport;
Final preparations for the Ohio was discussed. Members were
insured, but it was to be used by an are considering iasuranoe fraud. It's
wallet and run. I wisb I had. - . · Farmers Bank in Pomeroy; and Sons of the American Revolution . urged to write their state senator
uninsured friend. I've been asked tO not wOith iL
•
and n:presentalive on this issue.
overbill and increase the dollar
Dear Ala Landen: I disagree SADDER BUT WISER IN Health Aid Pharmacy in New state conference were discussed
Davi!l Sayre, Antiquity, was
Haven, W.Va. Tickets for the when Ewings Chapter S.A.R. met
amount so the patient's account with your advice to "Uquid Assets SACRAMENTO
welcomed
a guesL The applies·
DEAR SAC: Thanks for the dance only will be sold at the door recently at the Meigs County lion of DaleasColburn
would be credited for more than lhe in Michigan," the woman whose
of Pomeroy is
actual cost. In this way; lhe patient fUIIICe was a wild spender. You told testimonial As my dear father used for $7 siogle IJ)d $12 couple. liCk· Museum. John Kauff. Point Pleas- currently in the process of final
prices for the banquet and dance ant, W.VL, presided.
would not have to pay the insurance her theycoold have I successful to ·say, "If yoa go to bed WI'th dogs • et
are $35 per couple and $17.50 sin·
Ewings Chapter will host the
marriage if her fiance had no charge =·~surprised if you get up with gle. Classes of 1933, 1943 and conference by virtue of having the ~IIIIPter has cans of preset- deductible. ·
Patients always suggest these cards or checking accounts and if
1993 pay a $2 membership fee, but current state president, Keith Ash· vation spray available for sale to
thin~s in complete privacy, and it's
she handled the money and put him
And by the way • accordiDg to my tickets are given to them free of ley, in its membenhip. The confer- prevent deterioration of allltinds of
·never a woman. It seems only men on an allowance. Wrong advice, mail, being a co-signer has been the charge. However, if these class encc will be held at Holiday Inn in paper.
William Howison, Grove City,
have the nerve to make such Ann.
sowce of more IOUI'ed relationships members bring a guest, they must Gallipolis.
W:IS
guest speaker. He is a profesrequests.
When "Dick" courted me, I had a than sex. Unless thecollalaal is rock pay $17.50. Tickets must be purOhio Senate Bill 11, which wiD
sional
lie detector operator. H~
I have spoken to several fine career, excellent credit and solid, it can be a very 1&amp;1 idea.
chased by May 20. Checks may be again make it required for all Ohio
bMUght
his machille to show and
col~ues about this, alld they say
money in the bank. After we · ·Gem of the Day: If at first made payable to Wahama Alumni government offices to provide
explained
iiS operation to the audi·
, copies of records by mail at cost,
it happens regularly to lhem as well. married, he became a reckless you ~n't succeed, you're about Association.
e:Jce. He SIJeSSed lhat it is estimatWith all this chiseling going on, is it spender and overdrew our account ·average.
-ed. there arc CIDTendy 6,000 innoany wonder that health care ·is in so drastically that we were often left
An alcohol problem? How C/111 you
celit-people in jail. He further relatwith
very
litde
money
for
rent,
food
such a mess? .. SOMEWHERE IN
htlp yourself or someone yoalove?
. ed stories in his line; of work.
'
and utilities.
WISCONSIN
"Alcoholism: How to Reco111iu It,
The honor rolls for the fifth j Joshua Eagle, D8vld Snodgrass.
The next meeting will be May
When things got out of hand, How 10 Deal With It, How 10 Con- gra~nl! period for Rejoicing Life Founh grade · Erin Harris, Rose 27 at the Meigs County Museum.
DEAR WISCONSIN: There is
nolhing new ooder the sun. Every Dick's boss contacted us about full qw It" will 1i~ you the QIUI/IIers. Chnsuan School have been Schrock.
·
The program will be awards night
Fifth pile . Joseph McCall, Aaron honoring local people for various ·
gimmick and rip-off stunt hQ been payment of his employee charge Selld a self-addressed, lon1. basi· announced.
tried b'efore. Hlirth care profession:'" ~~:count .. 56,400. Although the ness-size envelope l11td a checl: or Farst grade - Andrew Philson Jere• · Schaehl. ·
·
activities including heroism, good
'
Sixth grade - Shannon Enright, citizenship, flag display and law
ais who fKidle around with the pa- account had a $5,000 limit, Dick had morteyordufor$3.65 (t/t!sillcludes my Yeauger.
enforcement ·
.
perwalc could be setting themselves charmed the young female clat into postage IIIUIItaluJlillg) w: Alcohol, Second grade - Cassie Braun, Rachel Forbes, Rachel Pangio.
up for professional suicide. Investi- allowing him "exll'll privileges."
clo Anll.l.antkrs, P.O. Bax 11562.
gators know exacdy what to look
Dici was soon $20,000 in debt. Clricogo, f/1. 60611-0562. (lit t:;an·
MEIGS COUNTY
One year after our marriage. we ada, selld $4.45 .)
for.

Ann
Landers

A MqiUmedla lnc. IMwop-

.

.

POMEROY - Big Bend Stem·
POMEROY • ReRUlar meetin~. wheel Association, golf tourna- •
• Drew W~rer Post No. ~9, Am~· . ment, Thursday. Entry fee, $50.
,~
can Legton, Tuesday, dinner at 7 Lunch at noon, Tee-off, 1 p.m.
•
· p.m.• meeting at 8 p.m.
'
REEDSVll.LE - Eastern School ~
;
REEQSvn.LE • Eastern Athlet- Board. special meeting, Thursday, •
ic Boosters, Tuesday, 7 p.m., high 4 p.m., personnel.
'
. school cafeteria. ·
•
· POMEROY · Meigs County.·: ·
MIDDLEPORT • Middleport Church public bible reading and
Lodge No. 363, Tuesday, 7:30 prayer. vigil, Thursday, Meigs ·
p.m., Middlepon Masonic Build- County Courthouse. ·
ing.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Group ·
BURLINGHAM - Bedford AA, Thursday, 7 p.rri ., Sacred : ·
Township Volunteer Firt: Depart- Heart Catholic Chun:h, 992-5763. ,,
ment Committee, Tuesday, '7:30
p.m., Modem Woodmen Hall, ByRUTLAND - Rolland Township':
laws committee and offJCm meet 7 Trustees, Thursday, 6:30p.m .. flfll
p.m.
station.
CHESTER • Chester Township
Trustees, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. ,
Chester Town Hall.

2 Secllona. 16 ,.._ 25 cenla

Pomeroy-Middlepor1, Ohio. Wednesday, May 5,1993

Multimedia Inc,

cers.

COOL VILLE - Revival,
White•s Olapel Wesleyan Chureh,
Coolville, Tuesday through Sullday, 7 p.m. nighlly. Rev. Jack Wilhite invites everyooe.

Low lonlgbt In 50.. Cle8r.
Thursday, sunny, blgb In 1101.

testing clinic set

~

;.

hound on Rou1e 124; approximate~
ly one-half mile west of Roy J~
Road in a 1977 Pontiac owned by
h1s father,. when he struck a deer
that ran into his path. Jllo damage
'was listed to the vehicle.
•
Elizabeth H. Bunge, Colum~
~ported to the Meigs COIUlty SherIffs ~anment, that on Monday
at 5:17 a.m., she was traveling
nonh on Rou1e 33 north of Darwin
in her 1987 Pontiac when she
reportedly fell asleep and her vehicle went off the roadway on the
right into the dill:h.
Modtrate damage wu listed to
the vdlicle.
Two four-wheelers reported
stolen on April 11 fro the Dave
Warner property in Ritland bavo

~:;cs.:1J=~s:.:.:, 'p
Accordina to s~. : _

port Police ~eeoYOI'Od one of tha .
fout·wboolon lilt .._ l'loe tha
, lagocJJ. Tho leOIII!d' - NOn .... '
in • field oft Pumetoy Pille ....;..._
dtis week. .
'
AD inveetipdon II cooitn....

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Vl II: I hll . . , 5, 1883

Commentary
IUC
t• '
•.
p
· DEVOTED TO 'I'D iR1'* 18N _ U . _ _.'""
..
'"ClllMtZA,

.,.c-...

~.·
IROBUI' L WDIGErT
P lEI

Bush for assemb~i­
nantly white, male
· dill was
belter ~ for a COIIIIay club tban
tbe Roosevelt Room. So we decid-

WASHINGTON- By IIJIIOintin&amp; a recad -ber ol millarilies

Gcwui M~r

LEITERS UF ORINION ...,
'Diry sl'lalilill lile las !han, 300
words . All let~ - sUI!j&lt;d IG i06iiioc -.1 k sipmll witlil lllllliO,
address and telephone mm!hcr llo10 ·a 'J&amp;e:is,. k ~- !.etten

s·

sbouldbeingooil !Wit..~--- -·

Seeing tbe ghost of VIetnam
in debates about Bosnia · ·
PJ WALU!Ilt. p=;M
AI'S, NCaa I I
7

WASHINGtON· WID
BiJCi
_..._F_Ii edy
in the Rose Garden 30 ,am ... tic r I ' I 0
- P "I ~
embroiledin~41
_. . . . • . . . . . tlc-1oil-m
--·-. ~o'--·sWIIilc.''
is. •5 ..,.4 will•-,.
· IGIVI·...,_u
.
lion quesriOIISDOilc:acilfie . . .p j &amp;c&amp;UL
~
ForaBtblllbas"'
I.~.WSJ.tlc.._. • .,
~
first political bcro ~~e . . lllliz . . _ .
•
a •
American .fon:e ......,_ill llilcae ia tieD 7
WI:&amp;_.._~
historically hlbihgl
so far, the policy._ lllll:ue af • •1" ".J U.S. I* e
on Euro--"" allies for a pulii:y af IIIIa: i£:
7• ..
'"l!·to
includca'j;""strikes.-J•ad•tlcl' "N - I ........
left Bosnian Muslims •1
111 S. I " biD ia tk ,ar.iJM ciYiJ
war.
.
1
Andsofar,itbala · 'alraatlc
af
· bJB«
Serb leader Radota K
a pcaz fila
a I lit• by lfas,. ·
limsandCroaL'Ik
· ·is ' I - 4 I Yc:ialk · ..,_
tinued on Moaday adO' •
5is..._, . . ...,_ Serbixn agreement c. ..-ds.
_
_
.
Untilthlthi!4 •• o· ••Siid,.llewill
s'
&amp; .. llili. wy moves ap""" ~ Sabl, .-~~awe
5.
_.
. . 10
Bosnia-Hermgovina • a ,araf....._,
_.
•
clcansins.
.
.
.
When, or if, ~there 11 a •
&amp;e _. ..,.c
L die p 1 • Slid
Monday. the United s - 111111111 11e
J ., jail a u · 1 n · "'
peacekeeping for'ce "~ &amp; a (ia-., tic E I
" . ID -*:it
. stick.
Bthesaidlleis.. ..
•
re-·IE •• .._..,
com~ into atipiacJ · • _:_"
There bas, hoWCYa", 1a:a .a: af ·a · e *
• •
son
the ground iD tbe C'* lllc pl:aZ
. . . . . us.. air . . . . ordered. In fact, ~heR~ M1 +.._-..pi I IJ - - - - . .
Either way, the B
z7 •
J- Ci
JllliJIIe woald
5

a

and women, President Clinton
delivered his capiip promise 10
appoint a Cabinet tblll ''looks more
lite America. ••
But it may actually loot more
lite a suburban cocktail party,
IICCGtlitlg to our examiaation of the
peaSOIWI finances of Oinlon's Cab-

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

!:-a::,c

Clinton ~ appointed
four blacks, two Htspamcs and
three women to his Cabinet, hisdelennination to achieve "diversity" is apparently only skin deep.
The Clinton Cabinet is flooded
witb multimilliopaires, even though
the per
· income in America is
$17 .S92':t:t fact would obviously
not be eartb·shattering news in a
typical administration, After all,
past Cabinets have been the exc:lusive domain of wealthy white
males.
Iii C.:t, one o1 the most popular.
jokes mating tbe rounds during the
Bush years was that Jack Kemp Bush's HUD sec:rellry wllo was
once an National Fooiball League
quarlelback - had showered with
more blacks than the rest of the
Bush Cabinet had actually met.
But on the campaign ttail last
year, Clinton lambasted George

I

•

•

*

7

_

C ·;:

-

e•d-

e~bispolicy '10illeP'*••,., swi.,_ID . . - A

-~..
. dier~u-

ul would not IDike M7 -=It •

with the CongJCSS 8lld •liP
. lie said.

a"$ M a lw!
fJ 1llli* tic A

.. ..
5

- 1 il

4

.
t i-•

Ji0i9t.~'

_ . . . ,.

when he toolc office ia 19il.- t6..mo., tic

•

Vie1n8111 m anmn: I Jl ..........ci&amp;k,aos.
WASHINGTOJil (NEA} A divisive 1b w ad'- I "I
...,_
n · I S.S SaJUI- Candidate Bill Clinton promised
dered South Vietnam IDJ!Ie
• NadL
.that. if elected, his administration
The eclxles oflhlll :•
* .,,.., aftlc-Ci
.,. ~ 8lld would begin with an unprecedented
avoicJcid;-now haunt
tic Cllllllic l:iliac iD ''explosive 1OQ-day a,ction periwhat 'was YUIIOslnia. RqL Jallll ' ' ' Dl'l.. - tic 3
cndlin . . od.'' As ~J:ifht
in the current vemac
.• Noll •
as another Vieawn. wbclelleaa J,adJIIIiJIIE'....
the hell out of ·there ... ne II:
I I I - . . ils • •
ill pa1
Everyone ki\OWS it is unfair to
because of the futililf oflllll pllii:J ia Yl
'ud&amp;e an adrninis1lalion b what it
In far different WUh
'• 1111 ·
•
tic liMiic a-t
·1. .
able to accomplish in a fittle over
the same: how and 'llibca ID KalA
+•
iD lil:cltlieast
three months. As that old political
the threat of hostile lOtion
hand Thomas P. '"Tip" .O'Neill
George Busb decided ID do ilili S.
ID lllliig
ICI1lll'ked the other day: "Govern- ·
relief, but avoided iawhw ia lllr: P •
C
1 CJieeoe llld ment works best that works slowadvocatedatougherU:S.policy. . . liiJiiilb:daf..-.:air,.,_. a · • . est."
C.
h
.
the Serbs.
•
. But Bill linton as on1Y 8111
When Kennedy ·sWCI"dcd Dwi&amp;l&amp; D. Fi I
• . . , W II'ICiidrd Clinton to blame for raising expec·
U.S. (;Ombat involvement ill S.•I
Asia, lllr: 'C · I£...,......"'
tations. In an interview with The
president told the new one dla"' • ~ p+l lly ......-~~ave to· New York Times afrer the Califorbe sent, unilaterally ifU.S. :ali5111111111-ll:lf..
nia primary, Clinton ticked off a
Yielding offlce ,t o.O-. IIIBIISiidtlc-af T J bl:eaiJiold list of things he thought he could
makes sense when thedi:s • • • 'Ala ·
· caabcdfectiYe, get done in his first 100 days:
and "whereitsapplil:alacaabc
•iaSIIIjll:_.lliiiie_..
"(an) economic reform package,
Iri Senate testimony. S.•
J afS.: Ww n..;wq~ cab!ed which includes incentives for prisimilar guidelines 8lld addal:
·vate investment, increased public
''Is there an exit'"' t A
1 · •ly'!"
investment and education miliaThose were lheorelica1 1 • • Tllej _ , 1 • e pnctical
lives. Then I want 10 try 10 J.liiSS the
answers.
health-care package wi~ ngorous
health-care cost conuols and a
.
~
. •orpackagallee of
or. aff
affoorda
... ble. health
1
•
I.!
-~ 1•:ir all Americans
..
By lmf objective measure, ibe
new
admtnisll8tion s accomplishTJTleA . -I lifts
ments
.-e paltry, while some of its
Today is Wednesday. Mar~. tic J2S6dajaf 1991.. n.:m- 240
deliciepcies
are glarins. One hundays left in die year.
dred
days
into
its life, hundreds of
, Today's Highlight in~
the
administration's
key positions
One hundred years • · • ""Paiiic 111. 11!13" lila New Yad: Sloct
Exchange. Various facials &lt;1'11111:..
' for 111r: 1 • • a w· 1. tiie remain unfilled; its principal legbanlcruptcy of a major l1liiRI.t ad
Me 1 .... aa:na.. By islative initiative is dead; 1ts relatheendofi893,tbeCOUlllly-iallle..._.afa- 51 · •

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MIIGS SIUDIINI'S
- ............ Tlt$11y nlallt
atdltAf 5 • E 7
n , ' .... lllMiiplfiPScbool1or
!Wrdl • •I'
7 _ . _ , ..,lbtltudetptb
Ji 1 s, illt!le M \ IAall!ol ;I DilbkL PI =ted trophies

left II ~ ,.._
7 t, T. ~ Dlz oC Braclbuy, 1 sixth
Ji"8lel; C"i' I 1' D 7 fl - r i . tT , G111Ce Klkbea of
s.lilhiJ, 'I pi • Wipl fiJETP 5... _. CUistopber Pick- . aD , _ , . 11 1 s, (I[Jbtlu TteiuletiJ', a silltll grader, of

R berl'/. Wagman

Meigs amwuncements
Kick-oft' slated
There will be a kiclc-off for tbe
Chester baseball and softball seam on Salunlay. Activities include
a dedicatioa and ~ at II a.in.,
car wash from noon to 2 p.m. at
Keebaugh's Dairy Valley and a
bake sale from 11:30 a.m. to 5:30
p.m. on the main ballfield with
games scheduled from noon to 6
p.m. On all fields.
CWUtnmeet
Church Women United will
have its May FeUowsbip meeting at
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church on Friday at noOn. Everyone bring a sack lunch. The host
church will furnish beverage and
dessert. A short business meeting
will foUow. The regular meeting
will be in the sanctuary afierwlns.
Ducepluned
There will be a round and
square dancC Saturday from 8-11
p.m. at the Russell Building in
Millfield with music by Rusty .
Smith and Dan Fruth. John Rusaell
will be caller.
Country music: night
Country music night at tbe Lot- ·
!ridge Community Center will be .
Saturday from 7 p.m. to midnighL ·
Refreshments available. Everyone
welcome.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4514

. ' .

SOME COMMON SENSE WAYS
TO DETECT A GAS LEAK.
with a system as safe and secure as your natural gas
service. a leak could occur. That's why you and your family
should learn some basic safety rules.
In cities, towns, or suburban areas.
Your gas company adds a special scent to the otherwise odorless natural
.
'
gas that's
delivered
to your home. If you detect
this odor:
.
.
.
~

MEIGS 10GB
'

~Sol

::&amp;::

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ber hlllblnd, Hobart Smalley, and a
8011, Leroy Baka'.
Services were held Monday at
the Memorial Park Chapel with ·
burial Ill die Memorial Part Ceme- .
lay in Mustogee, Okla.

Pomeroy; Derrick Bolla, a fourth lfllder, .and M~ttbew Jastlce, 1
sixth grade.-, of Rutland; and bac:k row, Kendra Cleland, a fourutb
grader, and Bridget VIIJIIIIan, a sixth ll'ader, of Salem Center;
Franco Rom uno, a slxdl grader, ot Harrisonville; Trk:la Davis, a
sixtllarader, Salisbury; Aaaa Fink, Tara Grueser, Libby KinK,
Erin Krawsczyn, J~sska McElroy, and Beverly Stewart, MeiRs
Junior HIJb School, all elgbtb graders.

a

so-called "hunger counties" hunger and that another 6 million
It may be remembered that back than $24 billion. How could tax. ~
around the co~~L;.ilf which at were at risk. This worked out .to in 1967, a team of doctors repre- payen be. contributing 10 m.-:h to ·. 1
leasl a ftfth of
· ts were poor one in eight American children in sentin tbe FICid Foundation issued food assist•nce for the pOor, yet the ~
and fewer than a third of elilible
ofhunger.
·
a
qdl after nncovering evi- ranks of the hllnlry pown 111 pre- 1
residents received food ' stamps.
B
he FRAC interviewers dence of widespread hunger and cipitoualy as tbe pllysicians task . I
·, ,
Usinf this fM!Iula, the phyaicians asked q ·
thal wae detiber- malnuaition throughout the coun- fon:e and FRAC 1U&amp;1C1t7
The wwer It tliit there are no :
idenlif'led. Eureka &lt;:ounAmty, ~ev., as alely vape, so much 10 dill it even ay.
the hungnest place m enca.
produced "evidence" showing tblt
The aovemment responded to more hunpy Americana today 111111 1
When th~ national media considerable numbers of middle- these reports by exptllding the food ther1: were m 1979. Tllo only thiJII ;. ;
delcellded on Eureka ~'f'J: class !dill wae going hungry.
stamp and sc:hoollnncb programs that happened to cblllp,our (ICr- ~ •
•.ouqwndietlyms~lhat It I 2,000'
Heck, if they bad broadeded and creating dozens of new food ception Of Amarlca'l bUnter pob- l
-, "
their survey to include tbe aocill X- proarams, such as the women, 1em was dlllltepub(lcul were in '
":
residents were adequately fed and rays who live in Beverly Hilb or mfants and children (WIC} food die White Houle lor 12 yem.
If
Democrats
had
been
in
the
.. :
had no need for food 111mps. lu it La JoDI or Maabal?ln's Upper East JIIOIIBDI and MeaiB on Wheels for
Oval
Office
since
1979,
we
;;
l
turned out, most of residents Side, they might have found cvl- die elderly.
,
woaldn
't
ltave
heard
about
a
'
worked on ranches and produced dence of upper-middle-claas
So ·IUccessful were these pro·
n~tional
hunaer
problem.
There
·
:
their own food.
hunaer and mallaatrition.
· gr11111 thal by 1979the Field FonnA more recent hunaer survey,
The point It that tbete hunger iJation declared tblll hunpr - no pever would bave beea a HOUle '.: :
Selecl Comllliaee on Huaaclr: And :: :
which also received inordinate surveya
1118 political clocu- 1on1er aiJIQIJiem In Alnel'lck,
. medi• coverage, usee! different . mcntlto J
y more aovenunent ' So w&amp;at occlllld between 1979 Tony Hall aever woufd have :
•
SJielbodoloaY, but produced simi- food doUatt. Indeed, the FRAC end IOday 10 dill II II M • • )' to ..u.cr 1111111.
. J. . . I'VItlna ... - - l i t .:• :
lalylkcwedraillll.
.
.hunger numben were died eadier have a national conf,eace on
· 1'lle Food Relearch and Attlon thla month by acwiition ol bali- hiiiiJII'IIa 1910, tile punment for TIM Saa Dlt&amp;O V•loa·Trl· ~~ :
ee.r, • W~-bued adYO- neaa, cbarch and DOlilicalloaden lpellt $14 biiiiOil on ._... food QM ud I UlldkitaJ.WI l!e1 b :
Cltf JIOIIP, interviewed families in whQ c:alled for a $10 billion expm- · propama, By 1990. the JOvern, Newapaper la!erprlse AuOeJa. ~· l
' •• t
se¥etll lllteS and concluded lhst sion or p a w food pograma .-t food bill bad cUmbed 10 more tloa. .
I
5~ miDion. cbildren suffered from.. . to ond hiiiJIU' In America.

'

Calaway, Cool~.
•.
.
She..,._. preceded in death by

Vetera.._ Memorial
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS Jessie Jarrell, Pomeroy; and Henry
Carpenter, Middleport.
·TUESDAY DISCHARGES Ethel Lambert, Charles Price and
John Lambert.
·
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
May 4 dildwges -: Elisabeth
Lynch, Brandi Smith, Charles Morgan, David Swain, Alexandra
Clark, Robert McCarley, Esther
Scurlock, Rus~ll Capehart, Mrs.
Billy Weiss and son, Debra
MUSick, Paul Branscom, 1.0. Bush,
John Slack, Amy Rupert, Melissa
Matthews, Artie Boram, JOyce Jividen, Barbara Wilson, Bethany
Jones and Grace Nelson.
. May 4 birth - Mr. and Mrs.
Steve Bradbury, doughier, Bidwell.

tionsbip with Capitol Hill is in talTbe budget resolution was after the new tax bill will be comters; and the president's approval passed with no Republican votes, pleted.
rating is the lowest ever recorded and already some Democrats have
"'If the he8lth-care pac~ confor a new president so soon after . ·come oot against key expel)diwres. tains a funding mechanism,' llyS a
Gi¥en the way Senate Republicails ways and Means Committee
walked aU over the White House source, "the tax bill will ·likely
0
on tbejobs bW. the same could eas- come uruaveled." "Funding mecbily h~n on the budgeL
. anixm .. is b!Raucratese for a Dew
taking olftce.
n;r."';' what is st~Wng to worry tax.
Trying to put the best face ~- many Democrats here; not what the
There is considerable pressure
sible on the situation, the· White administration has or has not being applied to the White House
House has issued gloasy 38-page accomplished so far, but that the · from CapiiOI Hill to delay die introbrochure listing its initial accom- largely inexperienced White H~ duetion or any specifite health-care
plishments. In the foreim: policy stalf is setting the president up for reform packft~Je until after die budarea there is the $1.5 bi ·on Rus- evengreaterproblemsindlefuture. get"reconctliation" process is
sian-aid package. On die domestic
"This administration is starting completed, lest they become entan- .
front is the C.:t that Congress has . to remind me more and mon: of the gled and the budget ends up being ,'
approved the $1.5 triDion first bud- Carter administration," says one held hostage to helltb CIR.
get resolution earlier than ever senior staffer working for the
Meanwhile, there Is consider- ,
before, and the pasS81\1 of the Fam- House Democratic Ieadersbip. : "I~ able countelprCSSUre being llp(llied
ilyLeaveAcL
.
has no discipline, no focus. It to tlie White House by various
But those "accomplishments" seems unable to set priorities. It groups that helped elec&amp;.tbe presiare largely illusory. The Russian wants everything, and wants it denL They are all demanding that ,
money is not "new" money, but now. It is soing in a dozen direc- their agendas be placed lint.
:
had actually been in the pipeline lions at Qncc -campaign reform, ·
""Bill Clinton appears to be tbe
before George Bush lefi for Texas. welf~te reform, national service, type who enU.ys policy debate in
The same is uue ol family leave. It budget initiatives, tax changes, gay tbe absiJact alot more than making
originally passed Congress last rights, women in combat, health tou11h choices,'' says • top-level
year, but was vetoed by Bush. ·
care - with no coorilination and Capttol HiD staffer wbo ,has been
As for tbe budget resolution, it no thought on how one tbing'might involved in a number ofWhite .
is simply a general statement of llr· ·
ton another:"
·
House strategy sessions in receilt ··
gets. tlie real work comes in pass- ~ instance, the House Ways weeks. "Buf he needs to make a
ing specific appropriations bills. and Means Committee is writing a few choices. to set prioritiel and to
That pocess is set to start in June, new tax bill that will include many start really fighting for his prognm
but many on Capitol Hill believe it of die new taxes and increases that or else be will become another
is going to be so contentious that it the administrstion wants. As things Jimmy Caner."
·
might not actually begin until now stand, Hillary Rodham ClinRobert . W~~p~an Is a lyDdlcat·
August and may not be done before · ton's health-care task force is set to ed writer for NeWBpaper Enter·
the new fiscal year starts on Oct. 1. unveil its proposals only a few days prise Association.
·

Hunger is really a non-issue today_ _ _ ______;,______~
Ohio Congressman Tuay Baa
....__-._0 *'MsCOMOr
suddenly found himself'- af a 111c' 5 a1 Fl
, 1 11 11a
chairmanship WI mondt wla •
bara as 5 b .... i. .aly· is::
House abohshed his Select c-- a-H·-~
mittee on Hunaer. la jliu' 11. lie
began a hunser llrike.
When it became BlliippWIIII
.
Wn.•-L D
J L -.
his fellow Democrats WOIIId . .
t:•IUIN! ·
reinstate his cornmitlCC ad ...
they were not terribly CWI • • 5
2 lil:e
that he might S111VC 10 dc:llllt IIIII
;;.-.~-;;.; ad liPdecided that maybe he sllodl • t1c • • •J-I;'IaJ five
break bis rut. .
._
yars ..- • .-, aut - a acw
He declared binllelf:
"eJby · ,...., ,.......ma • . , . tltat
the I&gt;qJartment of Apicdue's A
•
-1
; 1-lor
pledge 10' hold a ..
----:.,.,.__
Bill 6ac w sc;s ~
llw;s ...-'
enceonbunger. Tbl:abc-- cuilrllaa::4.
and llle lunch.
.. •
IIKI: ia 191S. lllc
It toolc tbtee ,.,
MICb ... llai •••
I
:rut
Hall 10 realize tbatlle - I I " I ~the political CIIJVe. ,. a .... a ...- 7
ripe issue wheil D · 01aaCIIIII!J ~-jllliiiJ....,._,,ar.
ute it to haall Rqnlblit• pn::li- a.t t1c IUt t.e M .. a.e ill:
dents wbo suii!)OIC4IIJ W!eR 10 COIICI • • • lidJ ....ics or .
blame for milliO.s of A
icaa .... • ticAL • 1 • il tdied
children •Din&amp; 10 W
aaat
5I
with .......r... in tbeirbcP'
•
.
Tie...!. . lif"ICd JSO

She is survived by a da1111hter,
Mrs. William (Donna) Andenon,
Phoenix, Ariz.; a step-1011, flobart
Jnnior Smalley, Wierton, W.Va.;
two step-daughters, Betty Ried,
Pataskala, and Don11a Young,
Pomeroy; six grandchildren; nine
t-gnndcbildren: three sisters
fJ:lly Powell and' Murl Qreen:
bolh ol Pboeaix, Ariz., aad Kaaie

ff

...,. 900'

af J4Xa. Dey

ness.

Hospital news

Elementary, Sarah Ball aad Kimberly Sayre, Syracue Elemen· ·
tary; and back row, Brian AUea, Gre1 McKinney, and Amber
Thomas, eighth graders; Matt Morrow, Kelldn Norris and David
Pickens, IIO(Ibomora, aad Todd Grace; Julie HUt, and Ray Prollitt,
seaion. Reeoplzed but not present Wll Juon Roush of Portland
Elemeatary, a slxdl grader.

h k
t
Ea:::t;$·~~=~;;-:f,:!:":i:-~~1: Cli~ton presidency o to s . a _y star
. In K.eonedy's iille,lllr:llaaill Yl

3

. Gaye Smalley, 78, Phoenix,
Ariz., formerly of Chesler, died
Friday, A{lril30. 1993, at a OOipilll
in Phoemx foUowins a short ill-

J·'

N\'l

I

Zi

· assetS of $3

PUT TOO ffUC"

•

Slid.._.

mary, Robert Mosbacher, reponed

I DIV

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$11.025 million plus a blind trust
worth over a $1 miUion. Secrewy
of State Warren Christopher has
assets totaling $4.2 million to $9.2
million.
- Jesse Brown is the rust black
to head the Department of Veterans ·
Affairs. The fM!Ier director of tbe
non-profit Dissbled American Veterans is worth betwcea $813,000 to
$1.8 million. Brown accrued over
$50,000 in vacation and sick leave
at the not-for-profit group.
- Henry Cisneros, C.Iinton 's
pick at Housing and Urban Development, is in charge of reversing
the=~America's inner cities,
His
sor. Kemp, had assets
totaling between $333,000 to
$745,000. Cisneros has assets of
$765,000 to $1.725 million. In
1990, Cianeros took out a loan of
over $15,000 in mler to buy an air-

hf•

Gaye Smalley

· Doris M. Hotelling, 83, 8690
County Highwar. 23, Alvada, died
Thursday, Apnl 29, 1993 at her
residence.
Born in Springvillll on Jan. 9,
1910, she was a daughter oldie late
Wilford and Susalt Dibble Plesler.
She was a homell)aker and a member of tbe West Independence United Methodist Church.
.
Mrs. Hotelling is survived by
three daughter, Mrs. Carole
McLaughlin,
Pomero)', Mrs. Nor•
man Wedge, Fostona, and Mrs.
•
. Bonnie Tyson. An:adia: two liOnS,
d ·
Gene Hotdling, Findlay, and Dale
Hotelling, Orange Park, Fla.; 22
grandchildren,
five step-grandchilBailey and Aaron Will or Chesler Elemeutary; Nathan Marcinko
dren;
30
great-grandchildren,
nine
aad Heatlt Protntt of Riverview; and Josh Xehl and Stephanie
step-great-grandchildren; two
Eva.._ ot Tuppers Plains; and back row, Meredith Crow, Trari .
great-great•grandchildren; two
Heines, and Marty Holter, eighth graders; CbarUe Bissell, Jamie
brolhers. Cecil Presler, Hollywood.
Onl, ud Jessica bdlord, IIO(Ihomores, and Je.-emy Buckley, Lisa
Fla., and Bud Presler, AuGres,
Holfman,
and Kim Mk:baei,«Dion.
.
·-··.
·-- -· .
Mich.; and a sister, Mrs. Jack (Evelyn} Newburg, Sparta, Mich.
Besides her pll{ents, Mrs.
Hotelling was preceded in death by
her husband, Ralph L. Hotelling,
on Feb. 14, 1959; four brothers,
Alan, Roy, Dale and Wilford
Preste·r, Jr.; and three sisters,
Dorothy, Lucille and Ellen Presler. ·
Services will be Thursday at 11
a.m. at Stombaugh Me·morial
Funeral Home in Carey with Rev.
Laurence Feaver, SL Mary's, officiating. Burial will be in Zion
Bloom Cemetery, Vanlue.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Wednesday from 2-9 p.m.
.;,J'
Memorial conlributions may be
made to a charity of choice.

~PJllER.

7

I

Doris Hotelling

million to 56.7 miUion,
at least $4 million more in trusts
and over $1 million wonh of art
and an!!9ues.
• ·
- Clinlllll's secrewy of Education, Richard Riley, wins the award
for providing the most detailed
financial disclosure. While most
Cabinet members provided few
details about their assets and keep
their files down to no more than
ed to put tbe money of Clinton's
about10 pages, Riley's file consistCabinet where Clinton's mouth is,
ed of a whopping 203 I'll!~· And
by comparing the net worlhs of tbe
his assetS totaled $1.2 lJIIlhon to
Bush and Clinton Cabinets.
.
$3.1 million.
After poring through tbe person- Interior Sectewy Bruce Babal fmances of all the secretaries in
bitt
is worth between $1 million
both Cabinets, our associate Ed
and
$2.89
million. He owns stock
Henry discovered that despite the
in
such
disparate
companies as
diversity of Clinton's Cabinet one
IBM
and
The
New York
Heinz,
color still rei~s supreme: green.
Times.
In
order
to
avoid
a pott.ntial
Here are die higlllights:
conflict of interest, Babbitt bu
The lone "pauper" of the Clinasreed to divest himself of his
ton administration may be Pen- Donna Sh!lla Ia, CI'mton ' s interests in Exxon and Chevron
tagon chief Les Aspin, who did not pbme.
list any assets. An official at the secretary of Heajtb and H11man because tbe companies lease a total
Offtce of Goverilment Ethics said Services, is worth over $600,000 ol over 7 miUion of acres of federal
laad.frorn tbe Dqlllrtment of lnlerithat means tluit ~·s usets are -including stock in Tootsie Rcill.
- Commerce Secretary Ron or for dleir p and oil operations.
smaller than the mmimum reportBrown reported assets wonh S1.7 Bush's lntenor secretary. Manuel
ing requirements.
Clinton's men at the Treasury million to $3.8 million. He has over Lujan, was wonh $633,000 million
and State departments have the 1$15,000 invested in a company that to $1.35 million.
. - AUorney General Janet Reno
deepest pockets. Uof4 Bentsen is installs and maintains all of the
may
be emerging as the claasiest
the richest of the Clinton Cabinet public telephones in tbe Los Angemember
of the Cabinet for her
- with assets of $4.97 million 10 les airport. Bush's Commerce sec- 1
couragequs Sland durin$ the Waco
crisis. But she is le.ft 10 the dust .
when it comes 10 net worth with
assets
totaling $147,000 to
~*-111
$430,000. Reno has a· deferred
·WJJ.
corDJl!lllSSiion plan wiJh tbe Slate of
M~'{Qt;
Florida in which she would be eligible to receive about $4,000 a
month at Florida's retirement age
ON PlAT~.
of 62. Reno could have started
receiving payments of $2,557 .SO a
month on March I this year. but
she decided to refuse her benefits
u.ntil sbe offiCially retires. Bush's
Attorney, General, Dick Thornburgh, ~ assets of $228,000
to $1.2 million.
- Labor Secretary . Robert
Reich has assets totalinJ $1.1 million to $2.5 milliori. Retch collect. ed $539,000 last year for teaching,
· speaking and writing. He earned
$5.000 a month for consulting tbe
Clinton transition team from last
November until this January,
Bush's Labor secretary, Lynn Martin, had $287,000 to $705,000 in
assets.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binsteln are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc•

Th~UIIh

• A~istant Publisller.1Codl I

-

.

UieliCCrellries.

CIIDIJ1NE IIOI!IUCH

PAT WHITEHEAD

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, May 5, 19113

.

The o.tly SenUnel

--Area deaths----

PIQI 2-The Dally,Sentlnel

Cabinet secretaries wealthier than most

The ·Dally Sentinel

'

lloiiJ

,

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j

o.a,•

S

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7

I

-.

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. . . . . . . .

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d:

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a'S

=::;·

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ii
"1!.

••

IHiors; md back row, Alllsoa Gmaaway, Ran•
daD Jollllltlln, Lori KeDy, Kevin Lambert, Lore• Oller, Rusty Trlplelt, md Mlc•elle YOUJII, all
-ian. RecopiJed for her acblevemeats, but
aaable tn attend, Wll KatrilUI Tu111er, uenlor. , ·

-· • Don;t use matches or operate electrical

.'

· switches, equipment or appliances.
• Leave your home, business or building and
·calllhe gas company from another site.
• Don't return unlil a gas com(:!any

Big Bend Health.&amp; Fitness
Announees ·
SUMMER SHAPE UP

representative arrives.
In parks or rural areas•
O,!JtSide some cities and towns,

a natural gas leak may

not be detectable by scent. In these areas, you. may hear
a blowing or hissing sound or see dirt blowing into the air; water

Fealurfng: New • pcaJion: 87 Mill St., Middleport
'
(On the "l'' In Downtown Middleport)

bubbling or being blown into the air ai a puddle, pond, creek or river; brown patches

New Hours: 7 AM-8 PM Mon.-Fri.

in vegetation on or near a gas line; or fire coming irom the ground or buming above it.

7 A.M.-3 P.M. Saturday

If this happens:

· (Begins May 10)

Nlw TWining Bid- Wolfe System (new bulbs)

s Seulon8 • $12

12 Seealona- $25
"Special Summer Rates•
.
~ li'IUiilh llembershlp Individual $65 plus tax ·
Femlly $105 plus to
8
Ia c aalngl Now Ia thie t11111 to 111rt ahllplng upl
lAit • 7 Is ape a;sm to llrget your fltnlu neldL llk
1 ~ . . . . cr

~~::~~

• Leave the area and warn others to stay away.
• Call the gas company and the police and fire departments.
• Don't try to extinguish a gas fire or operate any pipeline valves.
Chances are you'll never
.
. ellperience a natural gas leak.
But, if you do, lollow your sens~.

•

·· ~

eNORDIC TRACK
WEIGHT MACHINES

Look to ua for Ideas and the energy

to .l'!l•k• them work.

"•

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7

�Sports

WMinnday, May 5,.1993

The Daily Sentinel

Pomtroy-Middleport, Ohio

In AL action,

Wedne8day, May 5, 1993
Page--4

In NL action,.

.
The Florida Marlins' left-bander
gave up a grand slam to Chris Sabo
and a tw&lt;&gt;-run homer to Joe Oliver,
but his team outsCored Cincinnati
9-6 Tuesday nighL

" I don't like it when a swter
gives up six runs in six innings and
¥,ets the win,'' Hammond said.
'I'll lake it, but they sbould give it
to somebody in the bullpen." .
Hammond's first win in four
decisions came against the team
thalll'llded him in March. .
"I was pitching a little scared
because I didn't want to get beat by
them," he said.
_
Hammond compiled a 14-17
record with the Reds in 1991-92 ·
and was bumped from the rotatiOn
by tim Pugh during spring training. The Marlins roughed up Pugh
(2-Zffor nine hi~ and five runs in 3
1/3 innings, his quickest ettit of the

•

season. .
"I didn 'I hold up my end of ihe
bar . •.. Pugh said. .

~tes Destrade drove in five
runs for Florida, in'cludiog three
with a fust-inning homer, his second.
Bryan Harvey pitched l l/3
scoreless innings for his, eighth
save. He struck out Reggie Sandm
with two out in the eighth and runners at second and third, then
struck out the side in tbe ninth.
Struggling Cincinnati commit-

cs."

ted four arors and surrendered four
unearned runs.
"I had mr. best lineup out there,
and we didn 1 play well," manager

bad &amp;14-13 victory 'to sbow for its
In Hammond's three losses, firstoutingintheWindyCity.
Florida sc:ored a total of six runs.
"'I feel like a survivor, not a
But the 27-yt81'-old lefty is strug- . winner, after this exhibition of
gling himtclf. He bu yet to pitch bucblll," Colorado manager Don
than six ' .
and hill ERA Baylor said.
is S.S2. He has
strikeouts
'~What did it go, 11 innings? It
and 14 walks in 31 innings. ·
was so wild that I don't know how
"It's always a great relief to~~ many innings it went;" Cubs man·
that first wiD," Halnmond sa1d. ager Jim Lefebvre said.
"Hopefully that will kick in four or . Two of the longest balls were
five in a row."
struck by Sammy Sosa, who hit a
In other National' League games · three-run homer with twO down in
Tuesday night, it was Colorado 14, tbe ninth to tie it 1(}.10 and a twoChicago 13 in 11 innings; Philadcl· run shot as the Cubs scored three
phia 4, San Francisco 3 in 12
(SeeNLonPageS)
tnnings; Los Angeles 8, New YOlk
HUBBARD'S CREENHOUSE
4; SL Louis 6, HouSIOD I; Monii'CBI
IaN""' Open For
6, San Diego 1; and Atlanta 3,
1la• Sea..on.
Piusburgh 2.
ltMit PJ.m (Fitwwllt'
Rockies 14, Cub113
Y~ttt.W.), "-lfll._.m, Pllte4
Joe Girardi took his new budl'llllts, C..pldtllw ......."
dies back to the old neighborhood
just to show them all the stories
· Pin Az•a' R~•••••..,_
SPECIAL OF THE MONTH
they'd heard were true..
1
(
,
.
Girardi, a former catcher for the
c.lllleww '1.15 ML
Chicago Cubs, led the fust-year
HUIIIID'S
GIEEIIHOUSE
Colorado Rockies into fabled
SYUCIISI
Wrigley Field on Tuesday night,
OPEN DAILY 11-5, SUNDAY 12-S
and craziness ensued. Eleven
innings and 27 runs later, Colorado
992·5776

Tony P=z said.
Three unearned runs scored in
the fifth after reliever Bobby Ayala
missed the IN!g while covcnng fiiSI
base on a grounder by Ham,mond,
the leadoff hitter.
"Every mistake we're rnaiing is
compounded by another one,"
Pu~h.. said. "It'S starting to ~OW·
.
ba1

.

Cincinnati fell to 9-16. Florida
improved to 12-14.
"The Marlins are a great team,"
Sabo said. "They're ahcacJ or us."
The Reds' woes were compounded when second baseman Bip
Roberts aggravated his sprained
right wrist falling over first base
while running out a gro11nder. He's
listed as day to day. .
Benito Santiago doubled twice
for Florida and drove in two runs.
Dave Magadan went 3 for 4 with a
walk and three runs 8COied.
"It was nice to get Chris some
runs," Destrade said. ~·we haven't
been scoring a lot
he pitch-

,
PRACTiCING -\Glen aad Rodaey Tuttle
are pictured bere witb tbefr team vi Ilona as
· tbey make a pradlce rua priOr to _judglllg dur·

log the Drall'Hone Field Day ou Sllllday after.
Dear the Chester Ska&amp;e·Away oa S.R. 7.
Several teams participated ill the unual event.
110011

High-powered offense helps teams
getting less than all-star pitching .

...... ....... ,

when

,•

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ByHAJ,.BOCK
AP Sports Writer
Baseball gospel has always
preached pitching first and everything else after that.
Every team's piD'suit of a pennant usually starts on the mound.

....,,
....
.;

"

... ,.,'.·""·

Give a ·club a five-man starting
rotation of lively arms and a 90·
mph closer in the bullpen and it
frequently will fmcl a way to win.
This season pitching may ·be
overrated. It seems like yo11 can

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p8lllde any old arms out there Blid

win, especially if your team scores .
· do ble di · th
the
runs In u e gtts e way
De~~ ¥\~?fltn~itc:~g sllff fin·
..
ished Apnl wit an exceedingly
ordinary 3 64 earned ntn av:afe
•
and ·an almost
embarrassing 2
strikeouu in l9S inninf.s• lowest
total .in the"majors. Stil, the club
was tied f&lt;I fiiSI ~the Amer1":i~~f~ of .298tow~t:;
home runs and 169 runs scored _
·
tops in the majors in all three cate- ·

gories~

Gift Ideas For That Special Lady!

Scot·eboat.. d
Toaltlbt'apmes
.... ·
Ponlaad .. s... ~ 1 p.m.

- • Baseball • -

--

-·t~r,

NATIONAL LEAGUE
rWLr.t.G•

l'ltilidolphio .,..... 19
SL l..oWa C............. IS
- . ..............14
a.a,v......- ......... 12
~ ........... 12
florido ................. 12
New Yod&lt; .........- .• .9

~

.MO
.S'Tl
.Sll
.410
.410
.462
.315

II
12
13
13
14
IS

Tbunday's r.·mes

4.5
5.5

New Yod&lt; at row-, p.m.
S..alo" Utah, TBA
- a &amp; L.A. Labn, !0:30p.m.

7
1
7.5
9.5

Frlda;r'••-

a.EVELANDatNow S..,, TBA
PutlaodatS,.-,TBA

w-.10 .610

s-Pnrero ........17
-

·- - - --IS 10 ·.600

.5GO
.440

AI!Wa ..................l4 14
Son nqo.:.......... .t I 14

Loo-.. . . . .

a.EVELAND 1t New -.y, I p.m. .
""""'"aLA. CJ-.10:30 p.m.

- • NHL playoffs • -

I

U

5

·'

Cdondo ................IO 15 .400 . 6
10 16 .315
6.5
CINaNNAn.-....9 16 ·.360 1

· Tu.day'IICOI'U
l'lolid&lt;t 9, QNaNNAn 6
_ .... 6, S..lliolo I

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St.l...ouiltt T...wo.7:30p.m.
Lo&amp;An. . . atVJDCCJ~twt,10:30p.m .

Alllou3.......... 2
51. ...... 6. - 1
t.l.n4o 14, Cllia&amp;o 13,11 ilia.
Lao Aop1oo I, New Yui&lt; 4
Phi.l.dclphia 4, San Fraaeitco 3, 12

Tbtarlday'saalilel

N.Y. &amp;I...._, 7:30pm.

~at.Buffalo,7:l0p.m.

Frlday'sao11101

y_.. a&amp; S&lt; Loaio, 7:30p.m.
v--atLooAnploo, !0:30p.m.
.

- • Transactions • a-toaD
A-Laqoo
DBnOIT TIOBIS: J'lom:buc4 tho

_ .. ., o... J-.., f..tdt;.· ,_
Dclipo&gt;od
fat ...;p.

-

Mike-. .........

Teledo ~ 1be ·~1111

NINNI!SOfA twiNS: OpoiooeG J.T.

aic......
- · .. PWt~ao&amp;~lll tba Podt·
·Cout Loaauc. RecaUod Pat Mearc.,

,._.,__,

FootbaU

Nollooiol r00111o11 Laaue

HOUSTON OILERS: Si.ped Willie

.......NEW OIUJ!ANS SAINTS. : Sianoo!

Dnwrey, wide Nteivtt, ani Jeff Nul,

AMERICAN LEAGUE
T-

IWiemDIYiiloa
· wLr.t.G•

DoaoiL ................... I6

9
10
11.
12
13

NowYod&lt; .............. ll
8 .........................15
Tc.aato .............. ~ .. l4
Mllw..U. ............. II

CI.I!VI!LAND .......u

.,

8 ........ .................9 15

.640
.600
I
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1.5
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13
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10

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11
Seoate ....................13 13

.565
.560
.560
.500

I.S

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Kaoua Oty .......... .10 16
Oaklaod ...............:...1 14

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.315
.364

3
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Ckic1Jo.................. l4 II

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Blaile wa..• .WIIIIivc v.c:~t~e. to • 1wo.. , _ - Sipa4 Waydo BlMI• aocl
Jim OY.,..IDa, wide Neliwn, G Ted
!Wriaoo...Sia,.....,_olf......

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Califomia ...............13

Brad Legeu. etllllr, and Cnia Taylor,
fullboct .
NEW YORI. JETS : Matched tho.
cu..;.,..; lla1pla'
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mawbN..
Dnid Tate and JIINO
lMmtft4. {tfenlivo backt: (:hrit
s..-cor, wid&amp; .tec:ei.vor, ~~· Sh:awn ,

._

SEATTLE SEAHAWJ:S: Sipc4

MJPLootyt,dof..,.;...........

.

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Nolloul Hadley LeoJIIO
NHL: S~ Aid Dale Hwd.er, Wuh·
'N- Capilall
21
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T"'J""' of tho Now Yod&lt; lllaoo!en U1 a
playolf pmo"' Apdl21.

-·-pay,.,

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CL.EVELAND f. California 3
Now YooH, 0Uioocl2
Soaalo7,B-6

Mil••'*•'·~·
-4.Boltim&lt;ft3
Tau 3.. Toran10 2

'
PLAYER OFT$
WEEKUniversity or Rio Gr811de pitcher
Mike Voorheis, a senior from
Lucasville, Is shlll'illl District ll
aDd Mid-Ohio Conrerence Player
of the Week lloaors this week
with Ohio Dominican's Juan
c...ales. Voorheis Improved his
record to 6-3 last week by allow·

Balti,rnma (Mu.iall ~I )

(B-:Z.I),H5pm.
x...... Ci'/s (Appicr 2·3) at Detroit

(W=·~3-Z)atMibmobo

(Nnmoll-2). ~Q! , . .. .
WU!o (~.,._.)at C~VJ!.
LAND (&amp;;dodd 2-2).7o0S P"'Collf..,;. (Pamll 1·3) at Now Yui&lt;
~ 1·1), '1;,:10.r•·
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-

2-1),7:35 p.ol.

Ton.ta (Stotllem1re 3-2) at T•u•

~:Z.I),I :3Sp.m.

Tbunday's pmel
o.klutl (B. Win 1· 1) at Ba.ton
ca--&gt;~-1), 12:11! p.m.
.
.
' Ctlif""i• (Sanderson 3· 1)at Now
Yod&lt; (M. -l-o),l~30p.m.
(lollooon :1-2) a&amp; CIZVI!IAND
(loleoa 2-1),1 :3~
...

Blldmcn
(B.,..C).J),7:

2-2) •• ToronlO

pm.

- • NBA playoffs • :._
Tu..ta;r•ti_.

.

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--2-1-10. .. .
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. tions their readers make to the
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However, certain deadlines for
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Likewise, tbe deadline for submissions of locaf baseball- and
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as well as other spring and summer ,
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These deadlines have been insti- ·
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CardiUIII6, Astroll
At SJ. Louis, Bob Tewksbury
(2-3) threw a ·~·hiuer IIIII, for tbe
second game Ill a ""', ltad a tw&lt;&gt;-

mn llinlle.

•

•
~ill the fO.oJUD Ifill to cb.a
1W Hlrnilch (2-1).

.

.I

Dodifrs 8, Mets 4
At Los Angeles, rookie Mike
Piazza drove in three runs and Cory
Snyder,two.
· Snyder's ground-rule double,
only his fourth hit in 36 career stba~ against Tanana (2-1), capped a
· three-run fJnt inning and CofJOwed
two-out RBI singles by Plaaa llld
1 2ril: Klrroa. Pilla IIMid I lW01111 dDuble off .eUau« Nib Dnf.
er In the sixth. ·
•
· Pedro Astaclo (2-2) escaped a
belles-loaded jam in the fifth Inning
and earned the victory with belp
from Pedro Martinez and Jim Oott.

~~ucl~

116, New Yod&lt; 93, Nw Yell&lt;

... -,..

"

IJ

I .

••
1

•

Raajrers 3, Blue Jays 2
Ivan Rodriguez and Juan Gonzalez hit RBI singles in the eighth
inning off nemesis Duane Ward,
and host Texas raJJicd n .., Toron..10•
Brian Bohanon (1-0) got one out
and was tbe winner.
.

GRFAT
GIJT
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MOM!

•Toasters
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Makers

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AND MANY
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PICKENS'

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OPEN DAiLY 9:()()..5:00, .SUN. 12:()()..5:00
WE HONOR THE GOLDEN BUCI(EYE CARli · •
OPEN MOTHER'S DAY

Uall 90.
Uuh ..... 2-l-ll77, LA. Laton 102, LA.

~

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NL games

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Sports deadlines posted

Remember Mom on her day
with flowers from
Syi'ICUM, OH:

by Jantzen,

BAHR .CLOTHIERS

victory over Walsb, aDd pltcbed
a four-bitter against Findlay to
boost the Redmea to a 4-2 wla.
AI 15-12 overall, the Redmen are
third ia the district at 13·5, trail·
lag Ohio Domlllicaa aad Mal011e, ·
. and secoDd Ia the MOC at 9·5
behind OD. The te1111 flalsbes Its
re~ular season Sunday at Otter· (
be1n a ad meets Malone Ia the .&amp;1!1 \n
first rouDd or tbe district playoffs
May 12 in Canton.
·

',

li MiMe.GCa

by

IDa three lalla Ia Rio Gnade'• 1..0

[)aaDh S, l.an&amp;u City 3

· Today's cali!es

•Sportswear

•
s ·t.e Dresses
.. e}ialf , 1 21 , _ 26,1/1
Slt.e \ n
. •M,issy Dresses 20
Siz.es 6 to
'te Dresses
. •P.ett
leetion
.oreatSe
of 'S\OUS,es nd and

swlnl:. ·

RBI sinp in tbe seventh inniDa off
T0111 Gordon (1·1) tJ;at put Detroit
ahead for good:
Gordoa relieved after a rain
delay of 1 hour, S4 minutes. The
swt of the pmc wu held up for
26 minute~ bee•• of rain. ,
Dave Jobn1011 (1-0), pront(ited
from Triple-A Toledo before the
, pitched 1 l/3 iDninp for his
major leage vicwry S1IICC Aug.
20, 1991, with Baltimore. Mike
8enncrnaa got his sixth save.
Yankees 4, Athktles2
Kevia Maas hit a three-run
homer, carrying Bob Wickman and
New YOlk over Oakland.
Wdman (3-0) struck out Troy
Ned with tbe bases loaded to C'lld
the sixth inning. Neel hit a solo
home run in the ninth off Steve
Farr, who !lot bis sixth save.
Mass bit his second bome run of
the season in the fourth inning
against Shawn ·Hillegas ( l-3).

The three-run h0111er has always
forgiven a multitude of mound sins.
..,
Then there's tbe National
.
League, wbm: the fust place teams
'. :- ·
.
are the San Francisco GianiS and
,,, J '· 1- --Pbiladelpbia Pbiliies, eacb armed
"· ~ with what seem to be ordinary
· . ,...., . pitching staffs.
The Giants' rotation includes
•
five-game winner John Burkett,
who has three career perfect games
· - in bowling, not basel,)all- and
Jeff Brantley, a cireet relief pitch·
er, whose has a 4.00 ERA for his
fust five stans. From the left side,
the Giants stan Trevor Wilsat, 0-2
with a 4.66:ERA.
They are in first pl~e largely
because Barry Bonils ts hitting .425
with eight home runs and 2S RBis.
The Pbillies, who are81aying
.750 ball, start Tommy reene,
Danny Jacbon, Terry Mulholland.
Curt Schilling and Ben Rivera.
JackSon's with his fifth team since
1987, not counting Florida, which
• • •
clailned him In the exl*!sion dnift
WilEN ALL ELSE FAILS- W1lo says you have to have a fancy ' and Jl8SSed him along to the Phils.
fisblag pole to partlcipat~ In a flsblag derby. Just ask young He fs one or .three PhiladelphJa ·
1e=ld~~I~w:o:u:ldn::!'t~h:av:e~m:i:sscd:!.tha:t..!g:ot~tbe::m:·:ost:.:at:te:n:bo:n~,:~t~w:as:.:hl~s...:::========~
Bradley
JI!Jies,
pole
lbordy
after
arrh&gt;ln1
the J!ear
llsb· · · stuters
who areTheir
undercombined
.500 for ::
iag derby
heldwhose
durlag
thebroke
anDual
Draft
)Jorse
FieldforDay
their careers.
Chester Sunday. Not to worry, his tatber, Jeff JODes, (rilllt) ...d
ml\jor ~won-Joss record oomgralldfatber Glea Tlloma rljrged up·a bom_eJUde pole from a 8111all
ing intO diis season was a less-than
tree branch; aDd ia no time at all be wu cakbingllsb apia.
datzli 171-182. .
Wi~ John Xruk hitting .342,
•
(ContinuedfromPage4)
Philadelphia has won three of
•••
every four games i~ has played.
times in the.. llth 10 fall juSt shorL
Larry Walker and Moises Alou
When the Atlanta Braves, owner
Jim Tatum hit the first grand each had twe-run sinslcs in support or two straight.National League
slam in Colorado history during a or Martinez. (2-4), who struck-out titles, went out last wlnler and
·
tha
the four and walked two for his frrst added Cy Young winner .Greg
six-run eighth inning t pve
. f ..._
Maddwf to a rotation that already .
ROckies a lG-S lead. Girardi, Jerald· comp1etc gBIIIC 0 u .. season.
· had Tom Glavine, SteVe A.-v and
Clark and Charlie Hayes also
Greg Harris (1-S) allowed seven
d ·-,
homered for tbe Rockies in a pme hi~ and three walks while striking Jobn Smoltz, it seeme lite an ·
that was scoreless until tbe fifth.
out three in folD'· plus innings.
unfair advantage. The Braves'
Braves '3, Pirates 2
anny of anns even did a television
. ' In the 11th, Clark hit a tw&lt;&gt;-run
double and an error by shortstop
At Piusburgh, Mark Lemke hit a 'spot celebrating Cy Present (MadJose Vizcaino allowed two more one-hopper off the ri_ght shoulder dux), Cy .J&gt;ast (Giavine) and Cy
Colorado runs to score.
of Tim Wakefield 10 the si&gt;tth Future (Avery JPKl Smoltz).
Sosa also had a double as the inning, tbe ball caroming into left.
The _various Cys J:lave had the~
·
hed
'th
21
h't
Col
field
and
allowing
Roa
Oant
and
way
wuh enemy hmers as evlfi
1
~ ~h WI
s.
• Sid Bream to score. That gave . denced
_.AUanta's .gaudy 2.91
Willie Blair (l-0) was the win- Atlanta a 3-llead. j~ ~tiough to ERA, best m the m~ors through
and ,.. k McElroy (l l) took bold off Pill.lbuigt•• IJoyd McCJen- tbe fint mottth of tiJe.JCBSOD.
ner
.,.,.uc;
•
doll's grouader dlove ill a run ill
1bc Braves are.a game un~er
tbe loss~Phllllel4, Glaldl3
tbe ninib, but Mike Staaton held on · .SOO bee'""' ~a ~ tellll bitting
; At San Fnulciaco, Dave Hollins for bls lOth •ve. Tom Olavinc (4- avenge. David JUSbCC, Ron Oant,
hit a tw&lt;&gt;-run, oppoelte-field homer 0) looked shup In eight Innings of ' Greg Olson lind Terry ~eton all
·. , .
in the 12111 inning off reliever Dave WOik, striJtia8 outleYCJI.
under .200.
~igheui (l-1). Jolin Kruk singled
'leading olT tbe inning and HoDina
followed with a drive that clemed
The Staff and Residents of Pomeroy ·
th6 fence in ril!hL
' Larry Andersen (2-0) pitched
Nursing &amp; Rehab c;::~~te~ would like to
two shutout innin's in relief or
I
express their appreciation to the many
starter Curt Scb1lllng. Mitch
Willi1111s got his NL-leading II th
special volunteers who so selflessly
save.
.... ·••·· ....

FORCED our- CIDdllud ltCOIId llder Blp Roberts (top)._
leaps overFJoridl's Jeff COlliDe after maldag the out play Ill tbe
fourth bmiag vi Tuesday algllt's Nalioul Leape Ill Miami, nere
the Marlias beat the Reds 9-'. (AP)
.

By CHUCK MELVIN
ball on dry ground."
CLEVELAND (AP) - CleveThe Angels squandered ~everal
land's Carlos Martinez wears his excellent scoring opportunities.
emotions on his sleeve, a trait that They had runners 11 firslllld third
seems to be getting him in trouble with one out in tbe fourth and again
with increasing frequcDcy.
with none out in the aevatth, flilManinez, who is
· · word ing to score both times. They had
on whether he 'U be
for runners at first aDd second with
charging Bt Oakland pitcher Kelly none out in tbe ninl!l and stranded
Downs on Sunday, irrirated Cali· them.!here.
fomia's Scou Lewis by flinging his
"We've got to be bitting in tbe
bat away and blowing kisses to tbe .100s in thai depanment." manapcrowd after hitting the go-ahead Buck Rodgers said. "We're ~g
home run Tuesday night. The lndi· the piu:her in a hole, and we re let·
ans won S-3, sending the Ansels to ting him out. We're s~ging ~hill
their fifth straight loss.
.
pitches and not giVIng htm a
"'I jpst forgot everything as chance to b11ry himself. I think
soon as I swnng," Martinez said. we're over-agrcssive and over-anx·
''I didn't try to show him up. I ious. But I guess it's pan of the
don't do that to anybody. aad learning expcrienc:e."
nobody does that to me. He's a real
1n other games. Detroit downed
J.ood f"riend of mine, and I'm sorry KanSas City S-3, New York beat
if he's upset."
·
Oakland 4-2. Seattle stopped
MBrtinez said' the kisses were Boston 7-6, Texas topped Toronto
nieant for his sister. wbo was ~. the 3-2. Minnesota beat ftlltimore 4-3
stands.
. ·
and Milwaukee downed Chicago 6Lewis (0·1), who knows Mar· 1.
tinez from playing win~ ball with
him in Venezuela, was not amused.
Ti&amp;en, Yankees win
"'I'll reniem~r this," Lewis
Cecil _Fielder had gone 2.0 ;
said. "It's not hke he's a Barry games w1thout a home run, b1s
kind of Ia
1~
dro gh 'th th De 't
Bonds. But thai's tbe
p ycr .. ongest
u t WI
e trOt
he· is. I shouldn't
rea~l be sur- Tigers. Don MaUingly had gone
th
· he
174 bals 'thout bome
tbe
prised by e antiCs
·
atWI
a
run,
·"Granted, he guessed right, hit second-longest slump of his c:amer.
the ball well ana .had the gameOn Tuesday night, they both got
winning bome run, but there's a back into the
certain etiquette in this g1111e. I
Fielder hit !I 59-foot shot at
don't think tt's going to make him Tiger Stadium, leading Detroit past
any bella' of a player to hot-dog it Kansas City S-3.
.
•
like that."
"I just &amp;aven't been on," Field·
The two-run home run in the er said. •~But I have to fight my
sixth inning, Maninez's fllllt of the way through it in my own way..It
year, put the Indians ahead 4-3. doesn't do any JOOd to make a big
They added a run on C.los Baer- fuss over iL You have to be a man
ga's RBI single in tbe seventh.
about slUff like tllat."
Dennis Coot (1..()) pitched 2 213
Mattingly homered for tbe fust
scoreless innings, allowing one hit, time since Jut Sepi.IS, sending
as Cleveland won its fourth straighl New York past Oaldand 4-2. He
game.
went 312 Bt·blt.s Wilhout connectThe Indians IComl twice in tbe illg in 1991, and stopped this skid
fust on Albert Belle's run-SCQring with a driVe • Yankee Stadium. ·
groundout- his 28th RBI - and
Fielder's bome run - his first
Paul Sorrento's RBI single.
. since·Apri19. I t - the third or the .
'California answered with three
for the sluager wbo has hit
off Tom .Kramer in tbe second, all 30 in tbe past threcseasons.
on a bases· loaded double by Greg
•~If •Dad • gets sWted, he can
Myers during a heavy ~WIIpour ca~ry. us f&lt;!r a moat.b," Tony
that led io a 39-minute ram delay. Ph11hps sa1d. ''Wh~n he . ~ets
Right fielder Wayne Kirby slipped rolling, tbe 'lip get rolling."
while going after Myers' fly liall,
The Tigers have ~ doing just
and catcher Jesae Levis slipped in fine without him billing bome runs. '
the mud near home plate attempt· Rob Deer and Chad Kreuter also
ing to tag the third runner, Rene homered as Detroit held first place
GonzaleS.
in tbe AL East.
'
The umpires immediately
"Look IUOUnd this room," said
ordered tbe tarp onto tbe fteld.
Kreuter, who got three hits and
· "Wheq the fJC}d's wet, I can't. ~ his aveil&amp;c to .452. "Tbele
be ~ quick as 1 want to be. 1 have 1s a lot or support. We never feel
to hold my ground,'' Kirby slid. Jilce we're out of a blllpmc."
''That's going to·happen on a slick
Even though F'JC~'s. home ~n

:::Ld

J.:r'nine

.

.

·'

Martinez's .clutch homer gives
-Indians 5-3 vict9ry over Angels

Hammond survives Reds' hit ·parade to lead Marlins to win_
By STEVf;N WINE
. MIAMI (AP) - Chris Ha!Rmond bad only one complaint
about his first vicwry of tbe season.
He sUI he didn't desrne iL

· The Dally SenUnel Paga 5

Expaa " Pldrell
At Montreal, Dennis Martinez
, piu:bed a flve-111111111' • Manll'al'l
~ tllree-glllle loalDJ struk etlded.

dedicate their time and talents to enrich
the lives·of our residents.

On Friday, May 21, The Dally Sentinel will
have a special edition with photog~phs of ·.
high sch~ol seniors·graduating this year.
N through Friday, May 15, Drop Yo~u
Photo Off.At The Dally Sentinel or At Your.
High School Office To Be Included In This
Special Edition, A~ No Charge.
(Attach Your Name and High School
to Photo)

Rev. Alan Blackwood
'Valley Gospel Singers
Fir:st Southern Baptist Church
South Bethel Church
•
' Church
,.lind Nuarene
kine Naarene Charch
Syracuse Nazarene Church
American Legion Aux. Post 128
Faithful Followers Ous of the Hemlock Grove
Chriltian Church
. Hobson Oturch of .Christ
Bald l(nob Union Mission
Durward Cwnlngs
Brenda 'Thmpleton
Sally Holman·
~VG_l rtlplm Chapel

. ..,.. ...

.

~.

·'

......

~~a~

Pomeroy Church of Christ
·· .
McDonald's of Gillllpol~s
.
Faye Wildermuth ·
Genld Wildermuth
White's Hill Band
1

•

.

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\ ******
•

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.

ANY PROFESSIONAL, BUSINESS, INDIVIDUAL .
. OR CIVIC ORGANIZATIONS WHO WoULD .
LIKE TO HAVE AN ADVERTISEMENT IN THIS
. '
SPECIAL EDmON PLEASE
CALL 992·2156.
Ask for Dave or P.J.
..
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•

••

'I

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i

•

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�I ·••··•

Wed"'sday, May 5, 1993·

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Weclneaday, May 5, 1993

NHL suspends Capitals' ~unter for 21 games starting next season

Suns, Bulls, Pacers, Jazz notch
victories in .NB.A playoff action
s.-,:

By BOB GREENE
AP
:i!:r

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of free lhrows in the final 46 seconds to fmally put away the Lak-

A dozen )leCih •
A_nleles. en.
Vlade Divac sc:ored a playoff
all of. them assoc1at~ witli the
~ ~uns, llld the faitbful ~ career-high 30 pomts to pace the
m Pboerux a.e the only II'IIC bdiev- Llkaa, but threw up 111 air ball on
er.l.
•
•
a three-point attempt that would
~t'~ JUS! fine wtth ~SUDS.
have tied the game with eight sec. Tonight we_play~ wtlh fl!llhu- onds remaining. Johnson then
SlliSIJ!,and emouon, like we *d all closed out the scoring with his. free
year, Ouuies B~ ssid Now throws.
.
.
we have to take 11 ~ by ~·
"I felt I was m • groove, and
l!ecause only 01!1' ~ m Phoenix maybe that made ·me a little too
~the 12 guys 1!1 ~!Us ~leer room confident,". said Divac, !"ho left ·
believe we can.wm 1t a!L
the g&amp;l!le briefly after a thiid.quar. The ~uns slayed al1~e 'tuesday tel collisioJito have five stitches in
rught wtth a 107·11!2 VICtory ov~ his right eyelid. "I should have
the ~- It ~asn .t pretty, but 11 never shot lballast shot. It stunk; I
was a vJCtm'y, .JUSl. like coach Paul take all the blame. I lost track of
Westphal had predicted.
the time and rushed iL"
"It wasn't easy," Westphal
therfi •
d
.d "I
'
all "
I.n o
liSt roun games
w · twasn teasy 81 ·
. da&gt;:, th~ Chicago ~ulls, see~ng
. The Suns _had the best record m !hell t!Urd consecuuve NBA IItle,
the NBA dunng the regular season. defeated. Atlanta 98-88 to sweep
The !.akers were the only team to the Hawks· Indiana defeated New
reac~ the postseason wilh a below· York, which hOlds a 2-1 lead, 116- ·
.500 record. Guess who won the 93; and Utah took a 2-1 lead by
fin&gt;t two games?
.
. stopping Seattle 90-80.
Aftu the s.uns fe~ behind 0-2 10
Tonight, Boston is .at Charlotte,
the best-of-ftve. senes, Westph~l Pmtancf at San Antoruo, Cleveland ·
flatly ~Jared hiS team would wm at New Jersey and Hous10n at the
three m a row. They too1c the fJISt Leis Angeles Clippen.
step at the FIJ'Um.
Bulls 98; Hawks 88
Game 4 will be he4l Th..-sday at
The Bulls were stunned when
Inglewood, Calif., with a fifth, if Michael Jordan crumpled to the
necessary, in Phoenix on Sunday.
floor in the third period and had 10
Barldey had 27 points and II be carried off the court in Atlanta.
rebounds to lead the Suns, who But the league's scoring leader
squandered most of an 110-66 lead shook off a sprained right ankle
they ~ld wit!t two minutes to go in · and finished with 39 points in leadthe third penod. The Lakers, who ing the two-time defending chamoutscored the Suns 18-1 in the clos- pions iniO the second round of the
ing moments of their two upset vic- playoffs.
.
·
IOries in Phoenix, pulled to .J 01Jordan scored 14 of his points
100 with 1:25 10 play, but scored · after his injury as the Bulls swept
just two points afttz thaL ·
·
the Hawks and now await the winOliver Miller, Richard Dumas ner of the New Jersey-Cleveland
and Kevin Johnson e&amp;(;h hit a pair series. .

Tues-

BYPASSING WORTHY - That's the task
of the momeut for Phoenix forward Richard
Dumas (left), as be makes his move III'OUad L.A.
Laker forward James Worthy In the secoud

quarter of Tuesday •lght's NBA first-round
playoff game at Inglewood, Calif., where the
Suns avoided Immediate elimination by wianl.ng ·
107-102. {AP)

Lewis' collapse on court.reminds
Cummings of his own experience ..
Lewis' uncertain beginning. After 10 him since he fin&gt;t checked into a.
By JIM LITKE
the fust incident, Cummings was hospital Friday morning. He ssid
AP Sports Writer
so
shaken he dodged reporters for a Lewis was composed and that he
. Given his choice, he'd rather be
day
10 steel himself with answers. had no doubts lba1 his former pupil,
-the NBA 's resident expen on some
This
time, he left a statement with despite an abiding love for the
:Other topic. Still, Terry Cummings'
the
Spurs
for public consumption. game, would be able 10 walk away
had this to say 10 Reggie Lewis:
It
recalls
his own situation and from it
Learn to play with the heart you
urges
Lewis
not to ·surrender too
Then again, late Sunday night,
were dealt
Lewis left the hospital the Ccltics
"I have a feeling l _koow what easily the dream of coming back.
"A lot of it is stress-related. sent him to and checlced in10 anolhRe~e is going lhrough since I had
a Similar episode a few years ago," You're under a lot of ~IR and .er to get a second opinion. In the
sometimes you don t have the meantime, the Critics and team
Cummings said.
. "The good lhing about it is that proper diet, which contributes to physician Dr. Arnold Scheller
. he's young and if he takes care of this. If he takes the proper medica- already have backed off from their
himself, he'll get over it. And tion with which he IS comfortabl~. original opinion that there was a
then he should be able to play "strong probability" Lewis' .career
hopefully continue his career." ·.
Cummings, the thoughtful 32- again.
was over.
"It'S
knowing
~our
body,"
If the 11alance eventually shifts
year-old power forward from San
Cummings
futished,
'and
knowing
far
enough, if the swirl of ~on
Antonio, isn't a doctor. And he
what
you
can
and
can't
do.
I
hope
becomes a "strong probab11it)"'
doesn't relish playing one, espethat Lewis can return without domg
cially since the real dociOIS IIICnd· he makes a complete recovery.''
Lewis, of course, has taken only . himself signifiCant harm, one of the
ing Lewis don't yet know (or won't
the
fJISt sleps on what is bound 10 first thin's he should do before
say) the extent of his heart probdeciding IS put in a call 10 Cumlems. But when the 27-year-old be a long, painful journey.
Connecticut OO.:h Jim Calhoun mings.
·
. Celtics captain collapsed on the
Afler all, that kind of expertise
. parquet floor at Bot110a Garden in was Lewis' coach at Northeastem
the fu'Sl qllll!'tel of a playoff game and is one or the few people to talk should be good for something. .
Thursday nisht. there was reason 10
remember siot only Hank Gathers'
sudden death, but also Cummings'
extended life as a professional ath·
lete.
Like Lewis and Gathers, up
until it happened to him, Cummings thought he was bulletproof.
That Chan$ed forever on a December nig~t 10 Salt 4ke City ~g 1
his rookie season wtlh the Clippers.
0ne moment he was young and
S!rong and running the court. Tjle
next moment he was flat on his
back, learning the fJISt of the many
· . bitter lessons that come wilh a: bum
ticker. The moment after that,
woozy and disoriented, he got up.
That was 11 seasons, two All-Star
appearances and some 18,000
points ago.
On the one hand, Cummings
was lucky in a way that Gathers
was not and Lewis might not be.
His condition was diagnosed a few
months later as arry!hmia, an enatic heartbeat that can be controlled
with proper medication. Acccrding
10 preliminary reports, Lewis, like
Gathers, is afflicted with a form of
cardiomyopathy, a considerably
more dangerous condition in which
a damaged or enlarged heart mus- ,
cle impairs the flow of blood.
0n the other hand, Cummings
understands only too well the
temptation 10 make a living playing
pro ball instead of doing somelhing
less thrilling (and financially
rewarding) and Just Jiving. He is
intimately famdiar with all the
risl::s inherent in the bargain, the
uadeoffs between medicating yourRegular or Light
self 10 thrive in a game, instead of
just survive, and even the cold,
clammy sweat that follows each
shonness of breath.
And as if those reminders
· wercn 't enough, there were a dozen
· questioners hounding Cummings
after both Gathers' tragic end and

wary.

Pacers 116, K1Icks '3

In Indianapolis, New York's
John Swks was ejected from the
game when h~ head-butted Indi11118•s Reggie Miller with 8:421eft .
in tile third quaner.
The two free lhrows by Miller .
tied the game at 59 and i$Dited a .
spurt of 10 consecutive pomts and
a 19-4 run by the Pacers lba1 blew •
the game open. Aftu the ejection,
the Pacers outscored the Knicks •
59-34.
The Knicks lead the series 2·1,
with Game 4 in Indianapolis on
Thursday night
·
Detlef Sch~empf had 29· for :
Indiana and Rik Smits scored 25 . •
Pauick Ewing ted New York with '
19 · · and 13 bounds
'
pomts
re
·
,
Jazz 90, Sooks 80
'
John Stockton, who received '
minor injuries in a car accident the
day before ignited a fourth~uarter •
rail
utah'
... 2 1 1
too.. a •
over ,
· The Jazz., trailing until early in
the final penod, outscored the Sonics 18-6 to begin the period and
hung on the rest of the way. Utah •
can close out the series at home •
Thursday night.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER
'

INSURANCE
111 Second St., Pomeroy

Pork&amp;

?.t!·

ofV~-~-

Beans
.

··)-

..

But he declined 10 predict what
· the NCAA Infractions Committee
· will aay in its long-awaited report
on lhc case. Schultz laid he expecll
the finll tepert by Thunda&gt;: or Friday Ia tlie caso centermg on
imprOper loaDs to athletes during
1912-90. Schultz waa athletic
directOr at VIrginia from 1981'87.

I
. I

.,

Today,youcanpurchasetiresjust

llllout mywbere: mail order catalogs,

dqlwtmen! stores. tile service station
lllldlcc:orncr- so why·do so many area

to rely exclusively on
6mcral Tire Sales for all !heir tire
JDIIIQrisJs elect

ueetf!?
V'uil Owd• t c-. J.
eart4 « J.JJ l'qc suur ;,.
MiH''f'rrl,t~r,_WUWT2-

m.._••llilc-cak.

a_,

Wd•c•ilusll[tltisl'n-1

Vptlarc

~ltly

.

"But hockey is a sport with lots of
speed and last-second decisions,
and sometimes you act without
thinking of the consequences."
. "We feel the suspension is very,
very harsh," he said. "Obviously,
this is not what we wem expecting.
I'm not swe what I expecltld."
Efforts to reach Hunter were
unsuccessful. Bettman. who notified Hunter of the suspension by
phone Tuesday, ssid; "He obviously was not pleased, but understood.
He reitemted 10 me that he was not
a bad guy."

Adv~rtorio.l

Section

TPBA opening day
slated for Saturday
The Tuppers Plains B.aseball
Associ.ation announced that the
teams under its umbrella wiD have
their opening day Saturday from 10
a.m. to 6 p.m. There will be a
parade, basebaH and carnival
games, concessions and prizes.

I~•

5456 CoiW1 Avtnue
llncinnlll, OH 46223
800-li62:7716
cQlwtght 1993 .

Tile ttasons..are several, but per-

•

two of the most imp&lt;inant are
pia: Dl service. The persoonel 111
6mcral Tm: Sales arc experienced in
lire sales and service. They will assist

•

Lambert Insurance Agency

&lt;I&gt;

•

•&gt;
•
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I

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•

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•'

•I

When uying to decide wl!ich age which will give you and yourfamiosmance. company to insure with, . ily peace of mind for a lifetime.
As an expert in all phases of insurraucmller one thing: your indepen·
ance,
including life, auto, boat, motordenl insuranCe agent doesn't wos1t
b my big corporation witli the ac- cycle, mobile home, disability income
"'"•••ying red ~pe.:... she. wuks protection. fii'C, farm and business, slie

for YOU!
Thercfore,sinceshe'snotbound
by endless big corporate policies,
wl!idl often result in the iDsured be·
qiRaled more likeaC(IIlputureadOIIl sheet than a penon, your ,indepcudeut agent can design that pack-

becaitraa•aad. •

ciz;diedlild

10 enjoy JOOSI ........ - . , - .
rhin
.~
.e'
'~~ CJI'C'!Mewe£j 2
suf!iciela. .. ~.....,will fa·
7

••wwlllyCUJIICleejM,,

14/rt:'J Me" ••• • .D,. 1'-7
Cntci,II.D••t~M.•td'
·.D~

..,

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~4CD"WO.
•~~~~w,..,.-.

I

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a:iJts

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qc

10 riG .... " " - 2!0 ~­
TitqwUIIID111m:J . . . . .t/'. a •

Ctln

_.,_u.;;,.
,._JJIZ.

ejieati/IUG• II :col.lrJ~Isla.
t/Jar4Jjait•• 7 ••

illAIAitJu.

.

We suggest 10 the people of this
heating and cooling
p••""'"s thai you ~:.:xperll iu
FurtmiW &amp;: Abbou
· &amp;: Coolinc haldle tile job.
lbi5fmnspecialiresintheheatillc Dl cooling field and through
yan: of experience bas gained an
Cll'liaiJic: reputalion foc quality work
• 1
••ble prices.
Wllether· you need a unit for
JUir bomc or business, they will be
dwlliappy 10 look over your
iDiiYidual needs and~ a
r--uystemtokeepyoucomfort- .
:n11 wl!o· have

tbeloafii....... Yili&amp;r..n-a;.-.
is noontilr--.ilsp..C811be* rd.
Milly peliartllllldillliiti:e,ep+«+ au.

fluids which provide nutrients for the

erly. This fluid causes a build up of
pressure on the optic nerve. Damage to
the nerve is permanent l!ld results in
·eataracts,acloudingpfthelens panialto oompiCJe visioo loss. Olauof lhe eye, result from nonnal aging. !:Om&amp; can often be treated using eye
Surgety to remove the cawact has &lt;4oJ&gt;s. In some cases, a laser may be
been refined 10 a simple procedure, used 10 crea1e new dralnlae channels.
often done in an outpalient seuing
Diabetics n especially suacepunder local anesthesia. The cloudy · tibleiOeyeproblems.Bioodvetellin
lens is liquefied by sound wavea lhe·eye can hemorrhage, causing loll
(phacoemulsification) and gently of viBiOIL Lasers can be IIIOd 10 seal
suclioned ouL An artificial lens is theselealcyvessels,prevenlingfunher
implanted. freeing the patient from loss of vision. _
.
thick "coke bottle" glasses. Vision · . Maailardegenmlionistheleld·
i1SUallyhnprovenapidlyaftersurgesy. ina c8use ot blilldneM lilll!idillHge
Glaucoma is a condition where adults. The fii'Sl s
Is UIUally

•

Solly Lambert, Agent

1~ I ~::~~now u1.

able year-round.
Located at391 North 2nd Avenue
in Middleport. phone 992-5321 or 1800-356-6589, tbeykedealers for the
popular Lennox lfue of healing and
cooling equipment.
,
The employees of this fum are
well qualified in this field, hBving had
years of experience 81 theinrade. Foreman&amp; Abbott Heating &amp;Cooling guarantees all their worl:: with quality service after the sale. They can qulcldy
and easily install or repair all types of
systems, ltD'ge or small.
You will be satisfied witll any

worlc Foreman &amp;: Abbott HCIIling &amp;:
Cooling does .for you as well as the
years of service you'll receive flon\
ycur Lamox system and you will be
glad to recommend them just as we are
recommending them 10 you. We the
wri~s of this Professional Upda1e
highlyrecommendForeman&amp;:Abbott
He!uing &amp;: Cooling 10 everyone in the
area. Remember, they carry the famous Lennox line.

LENNOX.
I

. Unda Kirby, Manager
Dtsipcd for year-round beauty
dlaldluges wilhlhe seasons, Meigs
" 1ny Oadens has an exli!DSive

Memory Gardens is fully equipped to
offer eomplele pre-need and pre"CCOIstruction savices. As there are many
1M h \(, including many varieties advantages in choosing the family memorial estale before the time·of need,
fllfkHoat~gtrees and shrubs, S(ling
bll••1• summer armuals and fall the personnel at Meigs can assist you
'
aJiar, all encased in rolling green- in making your selection. Write or call
ay.'l'lismemorialgardenisaunlque forinformaliontoMeigsMemoryOarw!cliJVI,initself,tolhiscommunity. dens,St. Rl. 7inPomeroy,OH;45769.
To povide for your iJulividual Pbone Linda Kirby between 1oam and
.mpw beHefs and family tradi- 2pm Mon. through Fri. at (614) 992Sioat.: Meigs Memory Gardens rea- 7440 or (614) 593-5245.
This memorial garden reflects the
speeial' sections for brOnze
-leis, and monuments. Meigs well-planDed efforts..for a memorial

park ofpermanent beauty, one that will

endure throughout the agea. To insure'
this perpetual care, a special fund is set
aside. Meigs Memory Gardens sell
asidethisfundforthe~careby

. members instead of it·being payee! for
. from county funds and leaving a debt
for our ,children.
A memorial park shOUld reverently and ~tifuiJy portray die fact
that a loved me lived, not that he or she
died; as editors of this edition, we feel
that Meigs Memoty Gardens will express ~is qui~
. well."

~

H61.

The Card Box

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Buy-Sell·Trade

Lticolly Owned &amp; Opera!H B1 MIM H.W,

'•

can effectively handle your TOTAL
insurance needs.
Yourindependentinsuilmccagent
in this area we highly recommend is
Sally Lambert withLambenlnsurance
1\gency, located at liS E. 2nd in
Pomeroy, phone 99H641. When this

Meigs Memory Gardens

Twin City Machine &amp; Welding

!I

respected agent slOps out 10 your bon):
or office to discuss protection, you'll
be surprised at her low- key prclenta· ·
lion - quite the contrary of many
insurers.
To be independent of fmancial
worries, rely on your independent
agent. Call Sally Lambert and put in·
surance worries behind you. We the·
writersofthisProfessiona!Updaleaection highly recommend her 10 all.
·

Foreman &amp; Abbott Heating &amp; Cooling

By Dr. Jeffrey F. McAdoo ' inlraocular tissues do liOl drain prop-

I

lion, the experienced technicians 81•
General Tire Sales will expertly
mount and balance your tires If you
so desire ..
For service ,se/ec/ionandprice,
we the writers of lhu ProfusioMI
Update suggest you rely 011 the lin
prO[essUmals al General Tire Sales,
located at N. 2nd Avenu~ in
Middleport, phone 992-7161. Why
not slop in today and see for yoursel/t

O~Ce I .

•
'
Therearequiteafewgrocerystores good supply of fme sne8Js all the way ba:kapa..r.-.
throughout the area so there has 10 be a from hamburger to New Yos1t llrip
'Dicdl!rsflltn:ls-laaffll
reason why people drive for miles 10 steak, fresh produce, plenty ofall type1 bread..rdleail:lzllllldefllp!ptiR
shop at the Athens Save-A-Lo~ Jo- ofcannedgoodsand lhearea' s freshest pa.So• h
n1. • cau:ocl at 910 E. SUite in Athens, phone dairy jroduct.&amp;.
tlliai.-yCJW4· #
J " I
(614) 592-5061, or the Parlcenburg
Athem Save-A-Lot also always upaa • &amp;::....1 ) •vi&amp;&amp;. "DDe AAII'Save-A-Lot, located at 1805 Broad- has a good supply of those incidential See-A-Lat *-t'l "-:..._.fur
way in Parkersburg, phlllle {304) 422- itans that yilu may find yoUI!lCif all of lS CleiD •PIP farallidd.llll.,.
7842,
.
a sudden out of. SlOp in t!Je IICltt time
..... . - . _ , · 'Amonglhemanyreasonsareprice you need groceries. Wbether you stqp "frimd!
nwins a dlil.fiae.ae..
savings of up to 40 percent, well- by to p1epwdor a visit from 10 dinner
stocked shelves and!:Ouneous person- guests or merely to pick up a six- pack:
lJJe••riiiPI!n$11/tliia,., " - ,.,
nel who strive to service you in any of pop or some snaclrs, you'll always Upd4tc ..,., ,.
wl AAI#way they can.
be greeled by friendly, courteous em- Saw-A-Uit , , (Ill .,_, i'IPibJ
· This' fine grocer always keeps a ployees who want 10 see you awning '11«41.

· Seeing Clearly

you in selecting just thC riglu tire for
your needs and you'll fmd theiqrices
are extremely competitive.
Make your selection from a large
inveruory ofquality tires. There is a tire
tomeeteveryneed: passenger car tires
for foreign and domestic models, deep
aead tires for trucks and four wheel ·
drive vehicles as well as RVs,,heavy
dutytiresfortrucks,li'8Ctorsandhesvy
equipment.
Once you lulve made your selec~

nc-u

T...__.,TNT

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IAcally Owned &amp; Operated By Herb Grate

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FRISH

)

Assorted Varieties

Florlcla Yellow

World CIGIIICI
Soft Drinks

'

'

12 Pack 1 12 oz. Cans

$
Ill lUI COUPOII u- so1

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99

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~

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l
l

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18 •••
lllll J fnt IIIII
Wtlii ...... Mr,~3

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Tl!itwritcn"lltb;'nl · ~
U,J.u•d -~• , . . _ .
JIIUfict*r
·
dtiM &amp; 'lfdAw.-1....,.,_,.,
ctMlet:l
wf.,_. -z ,. a

.,.._Ciq,.

,._,/tr.,

Ql!kcting and trading ofspms
r:.dl -once conaidered a mete
dJnw•s ja'lt-time, but this is no

largest selections of spons cards,
memorabilia and hobby supplies at
The Card Box, locaJed at40040 St. Rt.
na.r-AdUlts.-oundthenation 7, IltlmileSouthofTupperPiainsin
"-:lllpntorealize lhalitcan be a Coolville, pl!me 667.(,()92.
'lll)'p+!filable investmCIIL
They keep a large stock at all
7f JOU are a seasoned profes- timesandyouaresurel0fmdjustwha1
. . . ...,.juslheginningyourool- youarel()9kingfor. You will enjoy the
iet'ii«Jn JODwlUfindoneolthearca's friendly aunospberc here and will fmd

they are always willing 10 aisist you,
Or feel fiee to browse as lorig u you
wish.

We thewriterso/this ProfessiottiJI
Update remindour rtaders 1101 to miss
the chance to stop iN at The Card Blilc
and see the grtat selectioN they have.
We're sure you' II be glad you did .

· Dave's Small Engine Repair

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llrliec• .....

In wtJilit . . IIIey laiae a.pleterw'iMIYWwiiiLC'ail ila-3761
foriufG
~•••IH
di_.. ,... . . . .

Contractors, hO£DC9WDCn and welding service, experienced Crafts·
industrialists in need of we.lding men at Twin City Macbine &amp;: Weldservice often have a difficUlt time ing specialize in indusqial and comlocating a shop witb juat the riBht men:ial services, but will abo Me·
combination of craftsmanship, ser- . vice yourr.ealdcntlal and aarlcultunl
vice and price. You'll f!rid all of Jieetls. Their well-maintained equiptheaequalitiesandmorewhenyou ' menilnc:JudeiMIO,nOI!Idbeli-~~~:
deal with Twin City Machine &amp;. welden, u well u portable "nbs 10
Welding,IocatedatRt. 7(17Cole) enablethem10performm111yrepain
in Pomeroy.
at your location. Thil-ea you both

,

.

~~~A~s~spec~i~al~ls~ts~in~al~lp~has~.~e~s~of~~val~u~~~e~dax~tan~d~~~~-~----~~~~~md~a.Kr~d&lt;~or~·~~·~....................f-----~------~-:~----:--=~---=~~----~----~~~----~~------------~-j ,

J .

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Con

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O.abocdtC- ., • ....._

Meigs·county Trucking firms,
As the-local speci~ists in o~ TNT P.la ia .,_
fleet maintenance managers, uuck truck and heavy equipment parts, .p leasotlto- , _ iDdi1ridui
drivers and mechanics in general TNT Parts'offers a huge inventory ll'llCt IIIII lleuj apq TN JW11
have reason to appreciate the ser- of heavy lluck and trailer silspen· Deeds. If tile) dia'l llawe Sk
vices and products of TNT Parts, sion parts, as well as P.t.o. units, put fOil Deed iiiiiDck. tlleJ will .
located at 923 S. 3rd Avenue in .brake parts, clutehea, drive - line be happJ ID on7cr it few ,.._
·
Middleport. The reason is their components, u well as diesel and
Tile wrilaa af ... l'nll'ealarge invent11ry of truck, bus and gasoline engine parts. A full line siOIIII Update 8e ftiJ' p'
«
..,._Wily
heavy equipment parts. To locate .of truck and heavy equipment to
parts you may need, call them to- parts are stocked here.
liOl stop bJ II lnl A - _,
day at 99 2-7737.
Serving mechanics and fl'eet see for yOIIDdf!

•

lop Frost ~
Orange_J•Ice ·.

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fedia&amp;_, ..................

Locally Owned &amp; Operaud By Micluul &amp;: Jeri'J Cliu

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(\JpOIIWilJ... "4 .. e4 • 10
1!1Ueewayday.,... ..r..ar.
.they iliD llL 'llnl"a a ,Filii

.TNT Par-ts

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Special

Athens Save-A-Lot

•••

l Start Your-Day Off.Right With Florida's Best
l

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Sweet Corn

I" - -

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Mot tier's 1Jay Safe!

Ean
Footl Clull

•

They create an atmospbere of a
graciouspriVIIlChome. And, theyen!:Ollfi8C resident110peraonalize their
rooms with favorile personal belonainga to maintaisi. a sense of continuity
in their Jives.
- ·-· Wben·it OonteiiO llllcialll!ld-- .
· reiUional programs, you'll iind it all
at Overbrook Center. Traditional religious services for all faiths tire also
held regularly.
Overbrook Center's way of life
givesitsresidentstheencouragcmeot, .

•

Sports briefs
•
Tennis
,
~MBURG, GzntU!Sly (AP) Marc Goellner of Germany beat
fifth·seeded Michael Chang of the
United -States 5-7, 6-4, 6-3 in the
second round of the German Open.
·
College
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - ·
NCAA executive director Dick
Schultz, facio"' a. review that could
~t him his
said there's "no
II!IOkin&amp; gun ' concerning his role
in a.lo8n IIMI!!'RiD at the University

,
At Overbrook Ceo~, you 'llfmd
their skilled nursing helps many residents resume tlleir fonner lifestyle
and assists others iii becoming as
independenl as possible. Residential
guests have the security of profesllional flledical-auenlionwhenever it
Is r¢quired .~
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Their rehabilitation prognim is
highly regarded and uses a keen appro~ch of professionally assisted selfr"£()vety, inCluding physical, speech
lind occupational therapy.

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_ ~tDiscipUne•. suspensions and

H11nter, 32, has long been
known for his physical style. His
game relies not so much on fmease
as his ability 10 get ill the middle of
the action in order 10 make something happen. ·

LiniJIJ Brlggle, Admillislrrllor

.
~T
POMEROY NURSING &amp; REHABILITATION \ CENTER

Chicken

•"•r•AApcDIIty." ·

aie all deterrents 10 actions

aot good for the game," Poile said.

General Tire Sales

-

~LZHEIMER'S FOUND~TION

"Til me, the G~ Bettmln em
bas started with thiS decision,"
· Po'lc said. "What remains to be
- i s wbclher SlllpeiiSions of this
lca&amp;tll will be the nor~ for the
fiare. YOU havt:ID have SQIJIC ~S· ._ irr plaJ:e. b everyone, dealing
wilb vlrioullllll diffaent actions
dlllllll:e ~on the ice.''
«Obviously, each case has to be
dec:ided OIJ its own merit,''
B r r said. "Bill if thel:e was a
c:•-, etr iii: idem with comJ*Il·
1111e c:M
, e., it would require

Overbrook Center

•

36759 Rocksprings Road

lines

sport.

PROFESSI.ONAL UPDATE. • •

YOUR INDEPENDENT ••
AGENTS SERVING '
MEIGS COUNTY
'
SINCE 1868

Fresh Skinless

MARGARINE

.at;::=•

sei'U:. ·

Save With I 04 Money Saving_~oupons

Parkay

By D.._VID GINSBURG
pension, which will COlt him lboul petili.e lou bJ illc &amp;p dus,"
LANDOVER, Md. (AP) • •
G.y 3 t
$150,000 in
Under league NUL
. Washington Capitals center Dale rules, the Capitals also will pry that Slid. ''JYII, w7ii!e.._il.,lliarlHunter was given a 21-game sus- amount as a linc.
qe ol p iNt p ky a-Fa·
pension by the NHL Tuesday a
-r
7 -esc:
Hunter was penalized for a lila,*
penalty designed to punish him'as blindside check on the New Yort ly lj ijS1 n
_,_ • ..,....
well as send a message to the rest Islanders' Pierre Turgeon in a play- . taat, dcta- s-=71 CG f 1 t ~ tiJc
of the league.
· off game on April 28. TurgcoD had fullR.
.
~e ~~sio!l, longest for an just given New Yort a 5·1 tiJiRl..
"u.Pr:r 111 walt.lllil illiolr 7
on-1ce tnCidCnt 10 NHL history, period lead and was in the procea pr. 10 cbll wi6 _ . 4 .,.
If
takes effect at the beginning of next of raising his arms in celcbntioll lhis iSII'ta wjg '!t Irs 1 \ )
season. Hunrer will not be allowed when Hunter knoeted him into tbe b'l 11mw w11111 ir.. lid ail is a
tO play in any exllibition games and boards.
n;:•
cannot pnctice with the Capitals
·
._...
n.nd.
Turgeon suffered a separated
until two weeks before the end of sho~.
Poile
.
.
,
s11e
r.
,.
.
the suspension.
"No punishment can. uado wasB!
·s.iJ'af r· Ja
. He won't be paid during the sus- Hunter's actions c:r erase tbe com- "''
q
· , wir' e ia a
•

.Flowers, Flats, an~. Hanging
Basket Sale
TO BENEFIT THE

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

.

. Profesional Update
Special Advertising Section
Editorial Concepts
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Loclllly Owned &amp; Opertlled By Dave Wortman
'111: uirme Dixoo in lawu aqd can dc{xnl oo Dixon 10 get your job
e ' eqaipiiiJ4 has 10111 bee11 done year after,year qulci::Iy and with
a;
with quality Dl dura- very Ullle repair, ·
llillJ. ., IIlia-. ,u.r lactlay auWhen looking for perfOIIDIIICC,
•
I
tlllci ... wi«edelkrfor llfcty and ctrlc:lency in JaWD CIIe
I, F.MIMilDnft's !ln!lll ........ · equipDent we llliP'l you look to
. . . . .,
I at 2S3 w. Main in Dixon IIDd [)ave's Small. Engine ReP - q; pll!oDe99'2·3921
pair. They are lllo 111 ~icc~·
SiDI il lllin llld W8 A4J£Uilll • .R!r r.turing a IIOCk of tepU, . .... rind lee Jhelr . . . . SSIIIII,.,.(alchaaPriggsandStnllOD
lilatlll.,_ pnpelll' Ullill, . . . de- ..,me. and psril); u .well u proVen
....... a,.-.ic1111r •llld llVIIil,.· axpalerhle to liiSUI'e you of procupt, ·
ll*irrawideVIrietyoflllodelt You rcliable terVice. Daw:'s Small Engine

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Repair performs service on aJI ma1tea
and models of l&amp;wn l!ld ganten equip- ' 1

ment.

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The write~ of lhb Prc(uo 181
Update higlszy I'CC0/1111111111 o-• 1
Small &amp;,illl R.,., G l - CG£ ' 1ity
J0M Ctlil rdy 011/ol' jii;foii!C.Ql

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pod:r:fl 111111 . , fOD4.. .... ....

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membfr they ctiT'f1 tltrfta - oc.
'-ttutd.ardalqillpfrJMt.......
&lt;1 Strtlftort e~~~illu 111111,..,. , •

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By
The
Bend
.

The Daily Sentinel

Obio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Wednesday, May 5, 1993
Page a

Family
Medicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

Water water everywhere,
and most is good ~o dri~ .
Bal; !:M C. Wol', D.O. AIIIOd·

-otF..U,Mf'vlw
· Ollio Uldwllity CCJIIe&amp;e al 0 I ~ '
pathlc MM!riae
Question· I bave been c:aJCtmcd
about the safety of our drinking
water fo: some time. The .............
of illness in Mi!WIIIbe thl;"April
seems to justify my CUICICin. Wt.t
.cam"! the epidemic tbr.re,ml is it
likely to haptJCD in my . town?
Answer: DriDkiD8 ,WIII'Z ftom !be
rap in in cities in the United Stites
is safe - re181ively SIJI'*illl· The
' number of individuals tblt clerdop
, Ill illness _
from ~...miag ~
rap water m •Y ~- )'13' IS very
low, but it doesn t ever ,_;II zao.
' Most of tbe time, the illfectious
:organisms get into the ~ supply
from a brobn water 1111111 or &amp;Om
highly contaminated water at !be
ate

PRESENTED PLAQUES • Longtime voiUD·
teers at tbe Pomeroy Nuning aDd Rebabilltalloa
Center were presented plaqnes at a receat
appreciation dinner. Among those recogaized

were frtlm tbe left, the Rev. Alan Bilek wOOd, 14
years of volunteer service, Faye Wildentvtb, 11
years, aDd Gerald Wlldennutb, aevea years.

Community Calendar .

RECO(JNIZJID • The Syracuse Nazarene
Cllurcb bas participated Ia activities at tbe
Pomeroy Nursillg and RebabUitatlon Cmter for
12 years. 1n the group rrom tbat cburdt recog·

Volunteers honored with dinner
An appreciation dinner was. held

...

.,

JAMIE JEFFERS

Jamie Jeffers

. observes second
birthday
The second birthday of Jamie
Renee Jeffers was celebrated
recently at the home o( her maternal grandmOiher, Joan King, ffiir.
riaonville.
·
The theme for the party was
"Barney the Dinosaur." ·
Ice crea~J~. chips and a theme
cake were ICI'Ved.
Attending were btr mocber, Jen- ·
nifer Kin and fianc:ee, Don Laud· .
ermilth! sister, 10IIJ,UIA NichOie,
Julie King,. Dave Reeves Jack
Kin1Jr.,)eff Kina. all o1Harrisoqville.

The Milwaukee epidemic in
April WIS caused by blctcria ' with the scientific name "cryp,............,; " .- that c:ontamiDalcd
,...,.,..._urn
.
• the water coming into one of !be
city's treatment plants. Cryp·
' tospOOdium C*' I MIJ", abdam·
iaal cramps IIIII dianbea when it
infee11 bnm• . In !be ~ )01111&amp;
•or lbe ~ old. die ilaa lillY be
iDore aaious, even life Ilk •ina~
. Fonuutely, most of !bose wbo
beccme infeclled witb tbele bKtDria,~

or.,__

outsenous~

1

( · THRU SATURDAY, MAY 8

)

.

OFF

ALL WOMEN'S CONNIE, DEITER
and AUDITIONS
Seniors, Don't fol'g4tt your 20%
discount. Our Gift to you, thru
Graduatlont
.
.

Alpha Omicron Cbapter, Della

!&lt;&amp;PJ8 c......... met m:cnt1y •

SH()E PLACE · ~9;27

the
Racine Uaited MedlcJdis Charch..
A chicken salad dinner wq

eral COIIteiiL The dissolved minerals ill lip Wlltt 1ft pleaellt in such
!1111111 ........... that !bey are teally
neither "good".o: "bad" for one's
llealtb, Minerai water is .not a good
soarce of the mintials you need in
your diet. y011 get tbat from eating
theriglltfoods.
'
Tbe, process of distilling
removes minllal and other contaminants - sucb IS bacteria .JtiOm
the water. All that is left is pure
Wiler. It does not have tbe ability
10 take minerals out of your body!
Dril* as much of it as you wanL It
is aood fer you.
"t'-0, MedidJie" Is a weekly
eol•••· To s•bmlt questlo•s,
write to Joh C. Wolr, D.O.,
Oldo u.lva*1 Collqe at Otteopadlk MnllrN, Gl'lllftncw Hllll,
A...... Olllo 45701.
•

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PICKUP • DELIYEIY .

--

........

'A-Gal.
Plastic
Jug

lb.
•

U.S. GRADE A
WAMPLER/LONGACRE SPLIT

Chicken Breast

3.25% WHOLE, 2% LOWFA T OR SKIM

· Kroger Milk

CALIFORNIA

strawberries
!FULL FLAT ... SB.OOJ

c::':W:.s.-n ~~

•••41

O/o

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VALASSIS

'COUPON VALUES
------~

VALASSIS
------

----

In Honor of
·MOTHER'S DAY

20-Pak

with tl:te purchase of any

. /21+
D riJ$fJli;.

MEW

•••·s. wo••·s. liDs·

-----

Str'!lP yourself 1!1 for summer! Rillht now, we 're
offering ~5'.1 off all our fun and festive sandals!
You can. choose from many leather styles,
11reat colors, thon11s, huaraches, metalllcs, •1tn11s
and more. Hurry-sale ends May 16!

1-----oDYia

..... A ARuM aWl uma....
, _ _ . . , . . ........ 2M fOLS 1
...... ,__._...., a 1w •

AVAILABlE ONI YIN STOIIfS WITH CA/10 SHOI'PES

L;

"IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE"
8" DOUBLE LAYER 36-oZ. OR
FRESH MADE

Mother's Day .
114·Sheet .cake
46.-oz.

WITH PRICES LIKE THIS ...
WHY SHOP ANYWHERE ELSE?
cONDITIONER OR

U.S. GOV'T INSPECTED

·oenuine ,
Ground Chuck
Pound

11·16-oz.

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suave
.Shampoo

.$ ' '

OHIO RIVER PLAZA • GALLIPOLIS, .OH. ~
•

DIET PEPSI, DIET PEPSI,
MOUNTAIN DEll{ OR

Pepsi Cola

greeting card

\

12-oz. cans
FFEINE

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ouart

served by the United Methodist
Women. Gay Perrin asked the
blessing. Fa'I(JIS wr:n: goldco 1111111c
pins and a diank·you canl. Tables
were decOrated with baskets of
spring Dowen,
.
· Sandra Nodruff gne a lepOit oa Ward, Viola ·Gettles, Jull,ith
the SKG spring coaveaticll darWJg Fetherolf, Elizabeth Lantz, Nan
the meal. Convention spcakCI's Moen and Maagaret Pinons. Mrs.
were Arditb Inman, Judie Deidra Parsons is a ~hapter member of
Hair and Marjorie Ala. . .
A1plla Omicron Chapter. She and
Ms. In,..., lpOte Oil iiiSUIIIICC Lucille Smith are the two living
and travel-audy JNOIIIDIL Judae cbaner members. Mrs. Eberts
Hair quoted from bel' book, u~ praised the presidents for their
Shoes, No Shirt, No Trill• Otber .work and dedication. Sbe closed
information inc:•Jded· Ohio hll die ~~t'C~ !,"ding "Everyone
third 1arge1t 'V"ber of DKG memThe necroloay committee of
bers of any lUIC in die inll:a•
Nettie
Parker, Myrtle Fri and
nrganization. Mclllbers .....
to write state represeawiva to ~ Mac:IW, gave a thanksgivvote against Home Rule Amend- ing pogram because the cbapter
ment in Houle Bill 152. Members lost no members during the past
were cautioned aot to. become year. Mrs. Parker read "Prayer;
involved in IDJ paid education rearranged by Mrs. Fri.
·'
work fo: 60 days ara railcmcat
because retirement pay would be
Tbe next ·meeting will be at
.
COL Bcaef'ltS in' tbe. fldilre will be Late Hope 011 SqJt. 27.
Present
from
Meigs
County
grea1est for CIRCl tew • n.
Fern Grilllm, fint vice prcai- Suzy c.~, Twila Childs,
Grimm, Wc:ndy
dcn~ llOIIIIuered tbe me n'111 Man- PlmeJa Crow,
Hllar,
Pauline
Horton,
Donna
bership chainniD Carnl Elall' ad
applil:atDI b - -bers. All Jenkin Lee Lee. N• Moore, Marapplicants ICCet*d bJ WJice pnt , . , _ , &lt;My Perrin, Nellie
Parker, Ronlie Sto%!.:-othy'
. vote.
Susan Will, parliamentarila, Woodlld and Rebecca
•

992·2124

$1 0'' .. .·. .

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amiOuDiled that the planning meeting would be JWIC 19 at 10 a.m. at
the bo'me of Mrs. Nodruff. Oflictn
and chairmen of the committees ·
sbould-nd
Mrs. Eberts conducted the
l'oulld«' s Day program. She read
the names of iwtJ::idents and

Ill W.IUJN STREnePOMEROY

1 , . ,....

'

,...._ - - m of Ibis min-

DOMINO'S PIZZI·

2 MEDIUM PAN PIZZAS

/

eace

Delta Kappa ·Gamma hears
report on spring convention

l't\IDDI.EPORT

Ulte

.._

. and many commercially raised
·chicb:DS and IIReys do as wdl .
. So infec!ied animals and infect·
..
ed humans .:e lbe source Qf dis illness.. Their bowel IDOV 41M'DS CCDtaminlte the water in lake~ and
streams, and muaicipa1 syste~qs
that draw from these surface
sources - rather than·from wells
- are more likely 10 take in waa
· laclen with tbele infectious bacJo..

DON'T FORGET MOM!

10.

witb-

Often crypiOIPOridium baciai.l
also cause infection iD animals.
About 2 pen:enl of the suay dop
studied in San Bernadino County,
Calif., in 1991 bad Ibis infection,

Mother's Day SALE

Rochelle Ballard honored
with recent birthday party

A birthday party was held Robbie, Kristen and Amanda
recently for Rochelle Ballard at Eason, Mr. and Mrs: Jason BaUard,
Royal Oalt Reson.
Jay, Debbie and J.T. Evans, Carol
A "Mickey and Minnie Mouse" and .Amy Sisson and John and Usa
theme was carried out with cake, Ulbrich.
ice cream and soft drinks served.
Guests enjoyed swimming.
Attending were her parcms.
Dave and Kelli (CieUand) Ballard,
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ballard, Lois
Clelland, Doug, Carol, Joel and
Meghan Clelland, Pat, Joyce and
Davey Medley, Brian Nuiter, Ray,
Janet and Tanner Tackett, Sheila,
Kirt, Danielle and Tilfeny Spencer,
Mr. &amp;nd Mrs. Gover White, Jeff,
Sonia, Nikki, Jeffery and Tyler,
Serena and Bradley Robinson,
Vicky, Christopher, Man Imboden,
Ashley Goode, Tricia Wolfe and
Ty Hill, Charlene, Lindsey and
Maggie Smith, Sharon, Lisa and
Ryan Russell, Slmdy, Andrew and
Britteny Philson.
Others presenting gifts were
Tom and Marie CleUand, Jane Bauman, Mr. and Mrs. Tom.MeKn,
ROCHELLE BALLARD

sowce.

Awards were given for years of land Nazarene Church, Faithful
service. The awards went to the Followers Class of the Hemlock
Rev. Alan Blackwood, 14;-Faye Grove Christian Church, the South
Wildermuth, ll years, and Gei'ald Bethel Church, the First Southern
· Wildermuth, seven years.
Baptist Church, ihe Racine ·
Nazarene Church, American
Le~ion Auxiliary 128, Bald Knob
Also recognized were churches, Umon Mission, McDonald's of
organizations, and individuals who Gallipolis, Durwilrd Cwnings, Calhave contributed with services and vary Pilgrim chapel, Hysell Run
programs including the Syracuse Holiness, Sally Holman, Pomeroy
Nazarene Church, 12 years, the Church of Chris~ Brenda TempleHobson Church of Chris~ 11 years; tOn and White"'s Hill Country and
the Valley Gospel Singers, the Rut- . Western Band.

-------------.,...-------~-----___.:_ _ _ _ _ · recently · tO honor vohmteers of
Community Calendar items
prayer vigil, Thursday, Meigs p.m., David Dilley f~ily, local Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitasingers. Pastor Steve Reed invites tion Center in tile dining room at
apJ!ear two days before au eveat
County Courthouse.
the public. Fei)Qwship follows.
the center.
and tbe day ohbatevent.1tems
·
·
Entertairun!lnt was provided by
must be received well in advance
POMEROY • POmeroy Group
POMEROY - Meigs County . Glen Evans and a video tape featurto assure pubUeation in tbe cal· . AA, Thursday, 7 p.m., Sacred
eJK!ar.
· · Heart ~olic O!.urch, 992-5763.
Pomona Grange will meet Friday ing resident$ of thli facility. A cake
night at the Rock Springs Grange decorated with purple flowers and
'
RUTLAND - Rutland Township hall. Harrisonvillc Grange will host . inscribed "Volunteers are PriceWEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT • Revival, Mid· Trustees, Thursday, 6:30 p.m., fare the meeting. The Slate grange bak- less" was served following the din·
ing contest will be judged.
ner.
·
dleport Community Church, Pearl station.
Street, throUJh Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
GUest speakers were Bill Bias,
SATURDAY
Different smgers and preachers
MIDDLEPORT • Ev~J:liae
administrator and Jamie Gillispie,
REEDSVILLE - Ladies Society, activities director/volu.nteer serChapter No. 172, OES, Middleport,
nightly. Public invited.
Fellowship
Chruch C1f the
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Honoring or
vices coordinator. .
Nazarene,
yard,
bazaar and food
COOL V!Ll.E
Revival, 25-year members and presentation
White's Chapel Wesleyan Church, of 2S-year pins. Officers were sale, Saturday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Madonna's overrated
Tables available fo: $5.
Coolville, through Sunday, 7 p.m. chapter dresses.
NEW YORK (AP) - The
nightly. Rev. Jack Wilhite invites .
world according to Janet Jackson:
TUPPERS P-LAINS • Tuppers brother Michael's a great guy, sis·
RACINE - Free community
everyone. ·
immunization clinic, Racine Fire Plains Baseball Teams, opening tel LaToya's brainwashe41, Madon·
REEDSVILLE - Olive Town- Department, Thursday, 9-11 a.m. day, Saturday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
na' s overrated.
ship Trustees, W~nesday, 7:30 · and 1-3 p.m., ages two months Parade, .baseball and carnival
Ms. Jackson said in the June
p.m., Shade River State Forestry through kindergarten age. Parents gaines, concessions.
issue of Spin magazine · that
bring child's immunization record.
LaToya's stories of sexual and
Building.
FAIRPLAIN, W.VA. " Liberty physical abuse by their father are
LOTI"RIDGE • Lotlridge Com· Mountaineers, Saturday, Jackson fiction.
MIDDLEPORT • Heath United
·
munity
Center Association, Thurs- County JI!Diboree, Fairplain, W.Va.
Methodist Chtin:h, spring rummage
"I think LaToya is being brainsale, Wednesday, 9 a.m. 10 3 p.m., day, 7 p.m. Everyone welcome.
washed," Jackson said. "That is
BURLINGHAM : Burlingham
Thursday, 9 a.m. to noon. Sponmy opinion: 1 think that's an atrenFRIDAY
Junior Modern Woodmen of Amersored by Eleanor Circle.
tion-getter for her."
PARKERSBURG, W.VA.· The iean, bake 1D1J yard aale, Saturday,
She said she apJioved of brothMcKameys,
Friilay,
7
p.m.,
Parle10
a.m.
to
6\p.m.,
Burlingham
er
Michael's
interview with Oprah
POMEllOY • Pome~~ Lodge
No. 164 F&amp;AM, Wedn
y, 7:30 ersburg Christian School. Admis' · Modem WoOdmen Hall. Proceeds
Winfrey arid his Orammy Awart1s
sion, $10 at the door.
go 10 Bedford Volunteer ,Fire Com- ~h, which showed people he is 1
p.m. Refreshmc;nts.
mittee.
' hwnan, he's not weird, and that
POIN,I' PLEASANT, W.VA.TUPPERS PLAINS - Orange
he's a good-hearted~-"
MIDDLEPORT- Round and
Township 'Trustees, Wednesday, Liberty Mountaineers, Friday,
The ~n star sa•d Madonna's ·
square dance, Saturday, 8-11:30
7:30 p.m., horne of the clerk, Patty Skateland, Ripley, W.Va.
''Sex'' 11 ' 1a horrible book.''
p.m., Old Legion Hall, Middlepon.
"She didn't even 5el1 that many
Calaway.
ANTIQUITY • Revival, Friday No alcohol. Children welcome with albums. Her last album sold 2 mil·
and Saturday, 7 p.m. Faith Fellow- aduU supervisiop, free admission.
THURSDAY
lion. They. shipped it, but it got
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers ship .c~ for Christ, Antiquity.
shipped back," Jackson said. ~--·
.
.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains VFW l'ost No. 9053, Ladies Public mVJted.
J&gt;Iaips VFW Post No. 9053 and
Auxiliary, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
Homemade comforter will be·given .· TUPPERS PLAINS • Round Ladies AtJxiliary, bake sale, Saturand square dance, Friday, 8-11:30 day, 9 a.m. across from Farmers
away.
p.m. by Tuppers Plains VFW Pust Bank, Tuppers Plains.
9053
Ladies Auxiliary. Music by
· RACINE ~ American Legion
DANVILLE • Weekend ser·
•
Smokey
Mountain Drifters. vices, Danville Church of Christ,
Post 602, Racine, Thursday. SupCallers, Red Carr and Melvin Saturday, 7 p.m., Sunday, 10:30
per, 6:30p.m. Election of officers.
Cross. Everyone welcome.
a.m. and 6 p.m. Denver Hill, FosPOMEROY - Big Bend Stern·
ter, W.Va., speaker. Public invited.
. POMEROY - Pomeroy Elemenwheel Association, golf tournaPOMEROY - RC1ck Springs
. ment, Thursday. Entry fee, $SO. tary PTO, carnival, Friday, 5-8:30 Women, bake and craft sale, Sablrp.m. at the school. .Entertairunent,
Lunch at noon, Tee-off, 1 p.m.
day, 10 a.m., Big Wheel.
·
games, food and prizes.
REEDSVILLE - Eastern School
RUTLAND • Dance, Rutland ·
LONG BOTTOM • Faith Full American Legion HalL, Saturday,
Board, special meeting, Thursday,
Gospel Church, Long Bottom, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., music by Pure
4 p.m., personnel.
preaching and singing, Friday, 7 Country Band.l'\lblic invited.
POMEROY - Meigs County
' Church public bible reading and

.

alze at the recent appreciation dinner were frnm
the left front, Daniel, Mathew and Heather
Babel, and back, Jim Cundiff, Sis Cundiff,
Fanny Aleshire, and Tammy Babel. ·
,

ria. But all municipal systems use
water purificauon methods
c!esigncd 10 kill bacteria, including
not only ci)'IIIOsporidium but also
the more common E. coli. Obvi,
ously Milwaukee's procedures
wei-en 't up to the task, but as I
write this I've just seen on the
news that this Wisconsin city's
Wiler is apia lllfe to drink slplight
from the lip without boiling il first.
It is~~ that an epidemic of
CIYPlOSPDridiiDII o: another waterIQDe illness will strike your community. However, I think it is
unlikely. ,The Milwaukee experi·
bas draWII public auention to
water quality. It is unlikely that
your city water department wants
to be the center of the next ''media
circus." I'll bet they are making
extra efforts now to make ~your
water is sife. Question: Mv husband mid I pd'er 10 drink distilled
water. When .we mention this to
friends, they become upset, claiming that dillil~ water will actually
leech the minerals out of our bodies. Is clriating dislilled water IICtu·
aDy bad for us? Answer: Most lap
water eonrains some dissolved minerals. Tbe "bad• r ·" of water is a

'

•

�•

•

Pomeroy-Mickii'J)Ort, Ohio

P,l 10-The ·Dally sentinel .

Wedneldly. May 5, 1993

Wednelday, ~Y 5, 1993

Pomeroy--,.Mlddleport, Ohio

On dean list
The followiq Me. Countians
bave been named to
honor roll
for the winrer quarter at Ohio State
University:
Andrea Leigb Cleland, Long
Bottom; Walter Edward Crooks, ,
Middleport; Carol Lynn Fisher,
Racine; and David Eusene Rice '
~e. L.' Swain, both of

te

Beat of the Bend.. ;
by. Bob Hoeflich
.

•

"·'

The White House said that Moll·
toris was llllioaally ~ for
her work as a IIDte official. trelbRI
a rail program that started or devef.
oped 13 new railroads in Ohio. ·
And the local ~onnection?
MolitoriS is the wife of O.Yid Colwell, formerly or Meip Countr.
Many of you will remflllbo' O.Yid
from his younger yean here. He's
a l&gt;rother of Mrs. Rex Shenefield
whom I'm sure many d rou,tnow.
David was especiallr ICIIVC Ul 4-H
club work during his youns y~
in Meigs County.

Retired Auomey Harold Martin
of Fon Lauderdale, Fla., bas maintained such a close supponive relationship with Meigs C01111ty, particularly the Rock Springs area. over
many years.
Several years back, Harold
vowed he bad made his last visit to
the oounty due to aging. However,
Harold bas bad a change of he8rt.
He must have gotten his second
wind. .He will be returning 10 attend
the annual Pomeroy High School
Alumni Reunion on the weekend of
May 29. Harold was i member or
the class of 1917. He's now 92.
He will be accompanied 11m by
his son who, I'd say. is the "desisnared driver". Martin 'always gets
such a lift out of a return home trip.
.nu.s, year should be no exception.

Two young ladies from the
Loog lloUonl area did very well in
the recent beauty pageant held at
the Vienna mall.

Daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Hensley, they are Brittni, S, who
wok second place in her ~e group,
three throu$h five, and Tiffany, 9,
woo was fllit nmner-:uj) 1n her age
Jl'OUP• six through I0.
- They are granddaughters of Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Hudson and Mr.
.and Mrs. Henry Hensley, all of
The Racine Area Community
.Pomeroy. The pageant w~ a mall . Organization, an up and coming
event of April26 and was tilled the pwp which would welcome you
mro membaship, will be staging a
Sunburst Beauty PageanL
yard sale from 8:30 a.m. ID 5 p.m.,
And also on April 26, 1olene this Friday and Saturday at Star
Molitoris of Columbus began her Mill Pin.
duties as the ~w administraJDr of
The group has asked for dona:the Federal Railroad Administra· lions. If you baven't yet conaibut·
:lion in Washington, D. C.. Moli- ed you can take your donation 10
·toris is former deputy direcror for the park on Thursday evening
'rails with the Ohio Department of when members will be getting
Transportation and former execu- ready for the sale.
tive director of the Ohio Raif · Did YOI! know 'the club is ~b­
Transportation Authority. She was lishins a neishborhood c{iJRe
appoinred by President Clin!DR. A . watch prosram and also will be ·
:White House press office released awarding two $200 scholarships 10
a statement saying that Molitoris · Racine area students this .spring?
·was chosen because of her proven So you see, the group is soins 10 be
administrative abilities.
doing a lot of thinp to conaibute
"Jolene Molitoris is a seasoned to the welfare of the community.
·executive with direct experience in
doing the kinds of things we need
Don't you wonder if those comto be doing", the statement poinred panies sending out all of the junk
mail bad to pay the same postage
ouL
•
Molitoris received the High rate as you and l if there would be
Speed Rail Association's Presi- so much of it? Oh well, we bave 10
dent's Award in 1989 and 1992. have something for File 13. Do
keep smiling.
·

·.

·welcomed.

A discussion was held regarding

the herb gardens at Bl~rbassett

lsland, Dave Diles Park and the
Meigs County Museum. Gardens
ihould be planned, cleaned and
planted by May 15.
.
· Advertising for the herb fest
:l!eld in September was discussed
·and the
oted to bave flyers
. ·professionally
Jl'OUP prinred.
v
· Linda McCoy was nominated
librarian. Anyone wanting to
donate books should do ':~ June
15. The books will be' av · 1e for
use by club members.
·
· Upcoming field trips include a
trip to Paul Strauss' Equinox Herbs
sometime in June. Plan to walk ·and
bring a camera.
Members wm urged to contact
jan Gerhold if plar;ming to assist

the herbalists during the
Ravenswood River Festival June
11·13.
. Betty Jones will be conduclinj! a
workshop ·on constructing bud
houses.
.
. Ann Kelly preaented the herbof-the-month plOJtatn on thyme.
Sbaron Tuttle demonstrated
container girdenina for the program. She emphasiud the need to
water daily, prune frequently and
fertilize every week. She used
thyme, dregano, JJBrSiey and marjoram in some of the dish· ~ardens
she demonstrated. Plants or this
type of growinj! include d!ue Boy
rosemary, maJorcan germander,
dwarf while lavender, dwarf curry
plant, white moss thyme, miniature
lamb's ear, diitany of crete, tuffet
thyme, "elfin thyme, greek minialure basil, dwarf santolina and
creeping thyme.
Refreshments were served by
Eva Robson and Karen Werry.

.

~Ohio

State Fair band
members are selected

Four Eastern High School band
members bave been selected to participate in the All:Ohio Stare Fair
Band from Aug. 6-22.
·
.·. . Mem hers include T. Charlene
o&amp;ily, Reed:sYille. Oute and picco'
lo; Eric J. Hollon, 1.:0011 Bottom,
baritone horn T.C.; Vicki .A: Warner, Pomeroy, f.er'=usston; and
Andrew D. Wol, Pomeroy, trom·
'OOne,
'All applicants ~ leCOIDinend·
ed by their school tnltrUmental
· · music teaeher and rtjllmnt ~
of the most honored youns mustCalls in Ohio.
•
&lt;

'•

I

.

'

In the Jl!OCCIS of selection, careful constderation was given to
attaining representation from all
areas of the state, keeping in mind
a balanced srade distribution and
fmding the most qualified students
ror the positions available.
TODAY'S IJARB
BV PHIL PAS.TORET

$ 99

PEPSI-COLA
.PRODUCTS
2 LITER BOnLE

· (hkk~~:.,.~.----·-·--~.LB.· 69
PORK BUTT

Spiral Perms '39.95

Steaks /R oasts~..............La.
FAMILY PAK ASSORTED

D~NNY

.

Pork Chops...........;.....LB.

FLINNER

· ~'When we say we

make our
customers feel
at, home,
we mean it."

OWHEJI.QPEIIATOA

MICHELE JOHNSON
ITYli8T

BEEF
STYLIST

STYUST./IM. TECH.

OWMED l OPERATED BY CAROL KING- WINNER OF 7 HAIR l STYUNG AWARDS

.......

~

....

As required by Section 4927:04(A) of the
Ohio Revised Code, The Western Reserve
Telephone Company (the Company) gives
notice that on March 12,1993, it filed an
Application (PUCO Docket.No. 93-230-TPALT, the Company's Alternative Regulation Plan) for an alternative form of .
regulation with the Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio(the Commission). This
Application affects telephone services of
all customers of the Company through
changes in the General Exchange Tariff,
its Local Exchange Tariff, and c~rtain rates.
Services governed by agreements with
other telephone companies are nolJiffected.·
The fony·one telephone exchanges
affected are: Ashtabula, Aurora, Austin·
burg, Bainbridge, Bloomingdale,
Centerville, Chardon, Chester,Coolville,
Cumberland, Dorset, East Claridon,
Fairview, Geneva, Hinckley, Hiram.
Hopedale. Hudson, Huntsburg. Kingsville,
Little Hocking, Madison,Mesopotamia,
Middlefie1d, Montville, Morristown,
Newbury, Northfield, Old Washington,
Parkman, Peninsula, Perry, Pierpont,
Powhatan Point, Quaker City, Richfield,
Rock Creek, Russell, Thompson, Trumbull,
and Twi~burg. The Company proposes
changes to certain regulations and prac·
· tices relating to its service and will file
appropriate tariff sheets reflecting these
changes.
.

the Commission files its Entry of approval
and acceptance of the Application. '
Any person, firm, corporation,or associa·
tion may file objections to the proposed
adjustments in rates and charges, and to
the proposed changes in regulations and
practices under Section 490&lt;:'-19 of the Ohio
Revised Code. The objections may allege
that the proposals are unjust and discriminatory or unreasonable. Recommendations
which differ from the Application may
be made by the staff of the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio or by intervening .
parties.
The Company's Alternative Regulation
Plan shall be effective for three years fr6m
the date that tht Commission issues its
approval order. The Plan will include:,.
CLASSIFICATION OF SERVICES:
Local exchange telephone services, including access services,are classified into
three general categqri~s: basic monopoly
services, discretionary-monopoly services,
and"competitive services.
COMMITMENTS: The Company will .
make an obligation to provide services or
enhance their value to customers pursuant
to the Plan. The Company commits to
·infrastructure improvements and addi·
tions or ~ustomer service i\5 follows:

Any interested party desiring complete
detailed information with respect to all
(A) Flat rate basic local exchange service
affected rates,charges, regulations and
will continue to be available during the
· practices sho11ld inspect a copy of the
three year period of the Plan. .
Application and all attached Exhibits at
the office of the Commission, 180 East
(B) RateS for basic monopoly services
Broad ~treet, Columbus, Ohio 43266·0573, shall not be changed during the life of the
at any public library within the Com·
Plan, except terminating premium carrier
pany's service territory, or during normal
common line charges and the access
business hours at the public business
charges.
·
offices of the Company located at 245
North Main Street, Hudson, Ohio'44236;
(C) The Company will conduct periodic
4616 Park Avenue, Ashtabula, Ohio 44004;, surveys to (i) educate and inform .its cus·
205 Hamlxlen Street:Chardon. Ohio 44024; tomers of new or potential services and
and 66 North Fourth Street, Newark, Ohio
technologies; and (ii) determine and eval43055. In addiiion, a Notice of Intent,
uate the immediate and future telecommuwhich summarizes portions of the Alterna· nications service needs of its customers.
tive Regulation Plan (the Plan) was mailed Customer satisfaction with repairs, instalto the mayors and legislative authorities of lation,and overall services will continue to
all municipalities and all public libraries
be evaluated.
throughout the territory in which the
Company operates. The ApPlication and
(D) The Company will Invest a minimum
Exhibits as approved by the Commission
of $4 million in deployment of
will be sent to the same officials and
. technology and services each year
libraries,as the Notice of Intent at the time
of the Plan. This investment will

Domestic and foreign relations are .
very much alike. Neither speak the
same language, nor do they trust each .
other.

'
.I

$289 s:;TAINEE~~:~~:~~~:S

. . .·

Cubed Steak. . . . . . . .LB.
USDA SELECT BONELESS BEEF . $179
Chuck Steak. . . . . . . . .LB~
USDA SELECT BEEF . .
$·199
Round Steak............ta.

&lt;

$159

~i

2 SJ

t

99
p~;~;::~ c.•-···---•Ha. $1
VA~E~ BELL.
.
$ 89
2%» Mllk. . . ~. . . . . . ~. . .GAL

....

(H) The Company will reduce the rate for
residential Tel-Touch service to $.75 per
month.
.

DEW FRESH

.

Margarine..............3 LB. TuB

PROGRESS REPORTS: TheCompany
will file annual progress reports with the
Commission provicfing a progress evaluation for each commitment.

•

OZ. BTL.

6.5 oz.

(G) The Company will file for approval to
implement one-way calling from within
th.e Company's local exchanges to the pub·
lie elementary and secondary schools
within its custOmers' local school districts
on a "no charge" basis.

EARNINGS: No earnings review or adjust·
ment proceedings related to the C6mpany
shall be initiated.or conducted by the
Commission during the term of the Plan as
long as the Company does not seek te
increase basic service rates.

HEINZ
KETCHUP.

STAR KIST
TUNA

I

PRICING FLEXIBILITY: For competi·
tive services the Company may adjust the
rates according to.Commission-deterrnined
criteria for minimum and maximum
r~nges deemed appropriate.

3 .$1
3~

(E) The Company will reduce the termi·
nating premium carrier common line
charge (applicable to long distance companies interconnecting with the Company)
a total of 21/2 cents per minute of use, to
be phased in over a three year period.
(F) The Company will file for approval of
~rate·reductionsthrough the impfementa·
tion of Extended Local Calling Service
(Measured Rate EAS) to the various county
seat exchanges oUt~ servke territory
where te~hnically feasible.

100 COUNT

89(·

99..(

SUPERIOR FRANKIE

. .
be in addition to the normal investment
neces~ry in meeting the Commission's
Minimum Service Standards. The deploy·
.ment may include such items as interactive video to public schools, upgrading the
system to digital technology, and deploy·
ment of fiber optic technology.
.

BREWRITE
COFFEE
FILTERS

$ 139

'

The 'IIU&amp;IIWn R111m
CDBt!li&amp;Jf for ·
........... .... AltwnatiJi .................

c

I

.MGJ Prom •nd
.Mother's .oa, Speelals
Reg. Perms '25.00
•

24 PAK 12 OZ. CANS

The New York Yacht Cl~b was
founded July 29, 1844, on board the
schooner Gimcrack. which was docked
off the Battery. ·
·

--

and dcdicatim cem!lOIIY a IIUC«SS.

Dyer read a letter from State
Master Bernard Shoemaker concerning Ohio's hosting National
Session in November and the
schedule of events for the session.
It was announced that Meig~
County Pomona Grange will meet
on Ffiday at the Rock Springs
Grange Hall at 7:30p.m. and tbat
the state baking contest will be
judged.
the next meeting will be fun
night on May IS at 6:30 p;m. at the
grange ball.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
WE RESERVE THE.L!!_GHI 10 LIMIT QUANTITIES .
PRICES GOOD MAy-2 .THRU MAY 8, 1993

April Dowers llrflll

helped make the chicken barbecue

River Valley Herbalists meet
at home of Shelia c ·urtis.
· Shelia Curtis hosted the April
meeting of the River Valley
Herbalists. Twenty-~me members ·
auended. Two new members wezc

but made a special bip to Pomeroy Elemeatary
to slwe ber art or IIIOI'ytelliDI. Sbe Is plctur~
here with lle\leral students as they participate In
Olie or her stories.

•

RC COLA
DID RITE COLA
A&amp;W ROOT BEER
SUNKIST ORANGE

·•

.

·Betty Newell, Chester, has been ·
named to chair the May Mental
Health Month Bellringer drive in
Chester.
•
According to Jack A. Young,
president of the Mental Health
Association in Ohio, "This year,
our annual drive will promote
awareness tbal clinical de~ion
is a treatable medicat illneSs. It is
part of a national ~lie education
campaign emph!15tzing the symptoms of depress100 u well as the
availability of eiJective treatmenL

THE STORYTELLER- Suaa11 Bre1111er,
B.S., M.A., of Olllo·Ulllvmlty, was at Pomeroy
Elementary Friday 111 tell stories to the lltudents.
Breaaer prneall StoryteDI111 and tlte Wltole
Lausuaae W.orksllop re~~: all or Atheas Couaty,

'

8 AM-10 PM

To head drive

.Historical project
topic of Star Grange
Oliver Kelly Historical Project
was discuSsed by Women's Activi:ties Chairman Janet Morris during
1he recent meeting of sw Gran~.
"..A donation was sent to help wtth
)heprojecL
· Eldon Barrow,lectun:r, present·
Cd a program on Mother's Day. He
Said the aials and work a woman
bad several years ago as compared
.to today's work as washin§ cfothc:s
and baking food. A poem What Is
a Mother" was read by Janet Mor·.
ris.
Master Patty Dyer conducted
the meeting and thanked all who

I

grade point aveiale of at least 3/5
and were enrolled for at least 12
credit hours.

.

SALE

STORE HOURS ...
,Monday thru. Sunday

Those hOIIQI'ed bave received a

---

There'll be BIIOihet free dance at
ihe old American Legion Hall on
Founlt SL, in Middlepm, Sabriay
night.
.
.
Providing music for the dance
will be c. J. and tbe Country Gentlemen. Frank Boles of Leon, W.
Va., is fiddler with the group and
he bas been Ohio Stile Champion
Fiddler three times. There is no
admission cbarse and no alcoholic
bevetases are permiaed. Children
are permitted to attend when
.ed by
.
adults
~~~..:~
""""' ~.....,g are ·to ......, snacb.
for the snack table and their own
soft drinks.

'

MAii~Em

$ S9

~EMPS . . .

.

Puddin
---

'

lt . .

... ~--­
...... __

MASTER ILEND COFFEE
34.5

·. oz.

GREAT LAKES

1
89(
. ..

GROUND

· ·
'

.

$499

BEEF
10 LB. PACKAGE

'
··::.=~--=···- ..·-·--.
··--

--·-

·

1

GRANULATED SUGAR

. $129

· 7~UP
24 PAK 12 Oz. CANS

. $2
. 99
PAIL
•

REGULAR

.

•r----~VVPVII"

MAXWELL HOUSE

. $299

PAK ·

.---~

.

1 Ice Cream. . . . . . . sar.
. 6'9(

Salad. Dressing. . . . . . . . . . .-..32 oz.
pEL MONTE

. .

DIET or

OOiy AI-~

SLI.
BAG

sI" ltll 55C. .
'\

a.v.

�\

•

~~~~~~~Se~nd~~~----------~--~----------~~~~~~~~OM~o~~==~==~~~~==1=~~~~==~~~~~~~!!

-~The children usually the first ones to catch on ,
J-· A Dfl

_.,

"indignities and contemptuous ,
behavior." Tnmslated into more
simpluenas, i t - llle slept wilh
almost every male in IOWII. She wu 'ANN LANDERS ·
a beauliful W0111811, and men found
"1!1!13,1MAaploo
her irresistible.
11meo
un.... n •• died, 1 was~ •......:....
~Sraollcole"
",..,.. ....,
- ... ~
to learn lhatltlle hid named me executor of her Cltlte. She wu a tive behavior, lbillk lbout this,
fermer motl, u excellent fi.,.,.., ,.,._ !'Yo """"-"• lbout it plenty.
o-- ..- ,..._...
staler and ewn beller on lkis. In -· SOUI'H JBRSBY '
her desk, I found four "liale black
DEAJtSJ~CIIikkenalwayalmow
books." Thaure at least 200 umes more !ban you tbillk, especi•lly
and phone numbers of men whq aboUt dtinp you'd prefer to keep
li..-cd in England, Swi!Zerland, New seem Thanb for the evide!M:o.
York,Canado, ..
u;...,;~n,
VellliODI,
Dear A.. loiJIMrl: This
is in
_._,
.........t
Pamsylvuia, Ollio, Dlinois, VIii, ~to "B.P. in Holl7w.......,
Aspen, Californil and o.ne in Fla.,"~wbo c:omplaincd lhat if he
Bangkok.
spent $100,000 on "trllllps' and
I also · fllWICI the following ·DOle wrore it off u a busincsl cxpease, it
which mtl8l have just !lboul killed wu OK. But if he gave his lovely
ber. It_, wrilten by our SOD when claughtet more !ban $10,000, the
bewasi3. Itn:ad,"Mom,youmu InlaiiiiRevenue~woulchoc:t
hippotrit. I saw what you and Carl itiD him. .
were doing on the couch when I
M. a lilt ICCOUIIIIIII. I hear a lot
came home from school 7
.....-..y.
of
complaints about the IRS.
Ilove bad, but I guess you
However, bolh_you 111d B.P. are
Since her death, our son, blaming lhe wrong people. The IRS·
"Don," has mentioned his mother does not make the I&amp;X laws. It
, only ODCC •• to tell me that he enforces the Iawa wriuen by
tbougbt I did the rightlhing when 1 Congress and si1ned -by the
divorced her.
palSidenL Unfortunately, once !hose
Don is in counseling and aaend· laws are enacted, everyone blames
ing Alcoholics Anon'JIIIOUS meetings lhe IRS;
.
-- 10 comply with a court order.
If you and B.P. wail! to complain
Warn your readers who are cheating about lhe tax laws. write to your
thattheirchildrenwillbelhefmtiO congressmmandyourU.S. ~.
catch on. Like my SOD, they may be · They are lhe ones responSible for
· 10111 between
. _CCJiiAu..;
•• Jo~•ties
lhe. tax laws, and they are the ones
_....
..... •"':"''lllf
~and ltilll to......,.,.. ani1 ae :.cJestruc.
who can make changes.

LanderS

s,....

don'L"

0

By MARIO FOX

Associated Press Writer
CHICAGO - Shawn and
Sylvie are married, but cheat on
eacholher.
Shawn's paramour, Mimi, has
become a singer who rivals
Sylvie's singing c:arcer. Sylvie pays
Lenny to run off wilh Mimi. Sylvie
· ditches her mobster boyfriend,
Chip, and re111r11~ to Shawn. Chip is
angry and tells Shawn about her
plottings. Shawn walks out on
Sylvie.
ll's the steamy tale of two fami.
lies who own Chicago television
stations.
It •s also Episode 36 of
Columbia College's TV soap

,w•• .....,..._

'

4

to

..

weren'i ready," Palenno tells student-director Ken Erdy in the control room.
Below, students wrestle with
cameras, lights and boom microphones oo the lifelike TV set.
Four takes later, Erdy gelS complimented on his camera swircbing.
Columbia students hoping to
some day land a 1V, stage or ftlm
job have been churniqg out
"Behind the Screen" for seven
years. Each week, students shoot
two scenes. It takes four weeks to
complete an episOde, Palermo said.'
The sonp is carried by 47 community access cable stations in
northeutern Dlinois. 111d is available to~ coDeges that a1ao send
programs on a national university
satellite netWOit, he said.
••All our families watch it on
the cable," said Tracy Davis, 20, a
stud121t drama.c:oach and TV direc·
tor.
"We got love, sex, treachery,
murder ... all the typical soap
stuff," said Palenno, a full-time
Columbia tcacher.
"Behind lhe Sln(en" cllaracterB
ll!'e killed off just like in the real

IMPROVEMENTS
Fi'a. Foundation to

Roof

Inside and Out
FreaEellmatM,
low Coate.
Work'Cuora11taod •

614·949·2335 or
614·593·5010
4-11-tmo.

r,•-

beginning and she's leaving oow.
S be developed her character so
much that she .asked us if we could
kill her off," said Susan Regele, a
free-lance writer who coaches the
student soaP writers.
The writers complied. Sylvie is
to die in a plane crash in a future

.

e~.

lthl
... '-h (0 1)
w n · twen.,-o,. 1 ~
d•'f• oftor tho loot
publlo.Uon of thlo noaoa
which , will bo publlohed
onco • - k for olx (8)
oucc-lvo woob. Tho IMI
publlcallon'wlll bo modo on ·
tho 2nd day of Juno, 11113,
and tho tw•nl'f-elght (28)
daya for •noworlng will
cornmonc• on that dola. In
0000 of your folluro to
anowor or othorwloo
r•pond oo required by tho
Ohio Ruloa of Civil
Procedure, judgment by
dof•ult will bo rendered
agolnat you lor tha rollof
domondod In tha P.Utlon.
Dol•d lhlo 23rd doJ of
April, 11113,

'

fs

Mother's Day
Sale

•High ·Back Foldina Rocker •Foul Position Folci~J &lt;halsa
sua.w uu . so .

11 PC. SHRIMP

$1.49

'

I

.

.

'

I

~011.4571t

LIMESTONE,
GUYEL &amp; COAL
Re•so••ble

''

•••••

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE

S.

2-7·92·111

Gotlng morr'"? "-d ·
lloworo? Acoauorloo?
Chock out my prlooo llnL

•

PubliC Notice
ORDINANCE ~. 1274-113
An Ordlnonoo to Abandon
'tho IIIey botwoon tho ·
llorouo ond IIIUo prOf*ly
on South Follrth Avo.
a. It ordained b'f tho
Council ol tho 91111lgo of
!Ill hport• lolloWII:·
• loo. 1. That lho IIOJ
liotwoon Lotll3 (owned ..,
Mr. and llro. John Barouo)
and Lot Ill (ownocl b'f llr.
Robert Millo) oxtondlng
.from IDilth Fourth Avo. to
lh• thru doy Ia tho _ , of
:th- pooportloo lo '*ob'f
oblllldonod •• • .,,,..,.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

-RODDEIS E-1 RIDE

fUI ESII.aiES

985·4111

KEVIN'S LAWN
IIAIIITEIWICE

NURSES' AIDE

. 1·800-137·1460

TRAINING
LOOKING FOR

WITH CPR

949-2191 ,... .

: · COIIPLITI
WELDIIG AND
UDIITOR
SERYICI

lawn Mowing,

Fertilizing, Waodlng.
ond Saodlng.
Shrub•ndTrea
Trlmmlng &amp; Removal
AoaldonUII \ ,Conl-alrll ,
FREE ElnMATl!S

ALSO GAS Till
' IEPIII
IWOUill PIICEI
CALL IIC

River Saddle Shop

4/ltln-tln

742·2223

36358 SR 7

..., llh
-

Only, -

.._

..

StiOIIor, Fumnure loby

(Allin ~ 3 IIIIH OUI M-

dloon Plko.

llloc. U IIIIM From 1154 I 7.1
111101 F""" 110.

Prices Start•n1
1

chino,
t. .

llrl.

•one

lloo furniture
roflnleNng. Ooby llutln, e141112-11141.

..........

Cholhlro, Comer 01 lloalo St.
FridiiJ
-SIIurdoy. Womon,
Chllcfron'o Clolhlng, Nla Toro,

llcJclo,-...-

Church I 4 Fomlly Yenl Sail:
llh, 'llh 1.!1h. t A.lll To 1 T Aun, 1 11t11 Off Aoula 7), labJ
n-. t.ovon Mow-. Fumhure,
Ctol'-, All Klndl, - , ,

Wllntod
lo ttl
lruy:
hamM. ....
,,.

OIO'DIC

CrMk

71h.
Qlgando

Yord

AOICI,

Oft

Solo;

H

lulrilllo lid. On LOll.
llloo. Toole, Clolhlng, lloy llh,

2251 Slld. St. • Syracwe, Oh.
(6141 992·531~

Thindlly, , . ,

Till 4, F...._

~.-.E­
Rie
On LOll Put
Cll,_ Conlor.

a.....

SEE US FOR YOUR TEA1\ NEEDS.
· T-stllrts • Hats • Unlfonna
Variety of T..Shlrt Colo111 and laltarlng Stylao.
I •• ,

,,Hi.l'

l l .II II (

dd~~~~l)~

ltll •, lill II Iilii

lloJ 1~_7,_ llh. I 111101 OUI 211,

..... ~l ...

Tar•, ....-., FumMurw. lllc.

~---.............~~~.....~~....-~_,1 N•l..-maad
r

--•-Dri••·

EBLIN'S ELECTRIC

24 HR.

COMMERCIAL &amp; RESIDEIItiAL

- Lice1sed, l1sured &amp;

Flnt

FridiiJ,IIoJ71h.

l'rlllllr, w. a lilt•
EII•OIP... on584. .

Th.......,

EMERGENCY SEmCE

TAKE CARE

Aoed,

=-:1$·J\!r~~

...=· '" . .,.,

Clltnlfo
IM--•·
wu1vw YlliiiJ ~~- Th~•

lo••••

=n

-

Employment Serv1ces

--.Dni-~,
~. eorp.t,Lold
t
11

(.Ill

•

Wllnlod To lur: Junll AulDI
Wllb Or WIIIIOiil ....... C1111
Lortr u.otr. nt 111 1101
Wllnlod To IUJ: Slondlnt Tllnber,IM-110..

129.95 + Tu ·

Help Wanted

'AVON' ALL AREAl! lhota JOW
time · •fth uo. You'l low lho
compony.1-.ose.
2 . . . . . . . . ._ , _

INm with 1 ~' ••r u&amp;en01

CDL-Hiod-304ll'tl-111170,

AVON I All - · t Shii111J
Spooro, -.el'tl-142t.

__ .__

FREE J08 T -.V..
JMdho
""'' "-"
-n
In
lrolnlng -In hollllll
lio

........

ouch • LPN, Nun1na ~nl 1

:::":l.::~~oy.::- ~ ~

..... 16-21 ,,. Old. Oul ot
..- . drop ..........
In P1. Jill............ 221

-

Ill,
....Pll,
- ook
· llay
1ft! -to 1:00
faio

=J!"••=~:::~
n-;-~...

FREE ESTIMATES

(614) 742•2345

Tlluro,F~, ..tl

W. T-.

,S.,

Pl. t:'teasant

4-22·'13-1 mo.

&amp; VIcinity

l!riY ~·7. ,~.o~o ol

a.,. -

JIHL.aacAn.
'""
-

:1211

3 , AnnCNncementa

CDII I jUftiDI

~mono

Coft 'Fiohlng Lallo,

On Sl. . -

3111. LIYo ...

Vlnlon, Ohio, $ 111 lllloli Nol1h

:.arnd, ~··e
-

-

· Picnic

-·

}

A.ll.
~ WaoldJ
. 1140 No AIDOhol ......... .
-1'14-1. I 171.
· tiTilu A tiki Flohlrigtt

IIIJ!ttc -

• -

_ , ....

On

- h , 1 I I Ant, Ell. MC11 til
fltlhtiJ. 117111111 Wooldr. Ill•
InC. !lOrn. Wit CIIH 103 131 1112.

c.....,.,

'*- ·

J a D'o Aulo- llild
... IMina I"'* .... l..U:
304-m:a41.

Uood 4 condMiori.
- · · ....
m.ao,
Good
Rnu
fllbfy
ptlad. --1172.

at

On

St.Rt. 7

oolrlgroolor ~

Good 1241.

lopltc
..... - ·114
bo In 1101111.._,
-.
I f.

2 Fro1t Struts • Liiiltor
• 4 Wlleel AliJ•••t

•••lll••tlal looll•t I• our

SIZID.aTOIIE
FOIWE
Call 614-992· ·
6637

1,

tor porto.
...,
....
Llonol
IUIII rl-..104of71..1711. -

,.,.__.

HOWARD

Stone Co.

W.nte&lt;l to Buy

T.1112 - - Pille, lloy 11h,
llh,
1111. w. woe s~u o- Old
-.....
lft8l'biM.
WIOWIII..
- . Anllquo Dliholl, Shooo, ·

A11110 u11ceme nt s

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
ond TAACICHOE WORK·

77W7tll.

Wllnlod to • .,.. !fonlll!o - ·
F--ILTop..--.

411819311 mo.

QHIIty

W Fomllr Yord Sale: ..._,.,

Chester, Oh. 45720
985·3406

IL--___;;;;:;.;.

EXCAVATING

::.=n::..=~I

ouctlon oorvtco. II
IN,Ohlo I WMI Vlrglnlo, -

Color
TV"'- .............
F......, YCII'o, Ill
-

n-, ~. llt8hn, l1o. •?

· CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

SOMEONE TO
HOME.
614·992-7698

Auction

El~--·
~~- 1nllno

Niw Wiring, Rowfrhig,
Troubi..Shootlng

OF IN OUR

&amp;

.,_lton-

p!OVW'.-

loP'ainlina Services
Interior &amp; Exterior
Painl
Homes and
Aluminum Si!ing
I•P'OW•er Washin~

USlD RAILROAD TIES

PubliC Sale

,..,._

A l r -... - - - -

ENORPRISES

BILL SLACK
992·2269

IN POMEROY
8:45p.m.
Spocllll Early Bird
. $100 Payoff
Thl• od good for 1
FREE cord.
lie. No. 0051·32

8

~I

Don1 .......... u.
WOftrtng lllljDI' l\pp 8 1

614·446-0736

1419 State Rl 7

MARY KAY
lndependlntiiNuly
Conoullanla
Carolyn lleCoy
(614) 89U082
Sand,. Hendlroon

•FIREWOOD

992·7204or

-·Alliin.

Yonl 11!!1' 1 I
1:00 Pll. n

t . t:OO All •

ol-111 . . . . . . .Lola
..

~:r.:..:..ol~,!'.!l•:il!l,l,"":

·-Lillo

rlgllt-of-wor, .
• loo. 11. That thooo two

Yon1 . . . ThurO, Prt I .._ I

YOUNG'S
SEIVKE •

odjHent property own••
"" - h gr8ntod tho -

Mit porion of thlo ellov

Fii.lit~~-~to~

-lt!ll'lll on IIi. a·•l'lllrooli.

_.,.L

,., tlq •• '-

"""' ......

Pomeroy, .
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

.t!:'l::..
..ueotdoso
tho

7&amp;11

deolgned for your lldn type.

•LIGHT HAULIN~

'=:::::;;:::;:::;;;::~

.~
. -........-~"

'-·
.
· P•oocl

,._,..,

.Jo

EVERY THURSDAY

daJ,

Yard SBie

7

-·-

EAGLES
CLUB

!Ill ., Sun

slflctive oldn en progrom

TRIM and
REMOVAL ·

w•
.......

Allo-

(614)1112~

,J,

"Inspirations"
Flower Shop .
IS&amp;-4178 4130

·'

..

SprfniTI~ne

Producto In SIDl:ll

667·6179

••

Aato-Rnf4Js
. Speefal

llory Kay hu I

992·3470

Remodeli•g
Stotl=,.

'••

~

IInce

vtclnlly of Honalna lid
11- &amp; llutlard. V.,
ftt.ndiY, .,...,. to Ouk•,
AEWAAO, chlld"o pol, :~04-~~Z22111.

3/8/tln

SIZED UMESTONE

-G•r•ae•
oCo•plete

..'

......

1&amp;.,....

3•11-13-tfn

36970 Bal hn Raad
- Po111roy, Ohla .

• oNewH0111t1

915·4473

-on

949·2168

JOE 1. $AYIE
TRUCKING
614·742·2138

BISSELL &amp; BUIKE
. COHSTRUCTIOH

fiiEES

LOST: m~le GaldM Aetrt.,.;.

mllolng

FREE ESTIMATES

., ', Side IIIII Rd. ICo. 71SI
.

1843.

I

Yonl-102.olllldiiiiJI n1 Htl,

., K.m.t. -.rd. 304-17!-

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

MORRIS'
EQUIPMENT
742·2455

,114--Mf.
L.ool: Ring of koJ• 11 Honlrnano

NEW-REPAIR

Rabatasott • - modtls.
• IINANONG AVAILABlE

IUilAIID, 011.

:-...:..o::.;.
- =-a.•- .

·ROOFING

, oiRUSIICUTIERS

12th do'f of

-11111.
.
,.
Apoot: Terl Hoollmon, Clartl
,
O.W., II. HoriOIIJ
•
1'roold11Jt of Caullll

· 992-6215

Pt •• ,.,, Clltlo ·. .

ts)s, tto

'

•
•

-

YMI-IIIIJI,I,I- ...n.
lid': ...

Howll'll L Writesel

o£CHO TRIMMERS .

FOLDING . FURNITURE by Telescope . .

DAIRY VALLEY

_,.. AMJ .c:'Q'JIOIIIJS

HAULING

2_5% &amp;.More Off PATIO FURNITURE

People in
the news

~

Mow•s

roaordlnJ.;:"

to

prrp'g;

e£AGU STAR MOWERS
Chack out tlta 12&amp; 18 HP

:

-·

~~~~

10 miiM lOuth of Glllllpolls

4126/lfn

..

a Whho

Found: Ton

Type cat, 114 ••• 120'1.

J. S. MARINE

llallll: lull. I loa. Clalod
lUlL, Wad. Fll.
1:30 lllt6:30 pm
Thurt. I S&amp; lhn4 pm
ICM llulnny Awt.

949·2104 .

Found: • " " ' - Cl!l, 114-441lml. •

Pa..-.1.., M..:ury Oulbo•rrto

~~·

. Wtteleaters
, " Authorized: Brlggo &amp;
St,.Uon MTD, Ryan,
I.D.C. Repllr Contor
PICKUP and DEUVERY
Houre 16- M·F V-3 Sal
Cloood Sundoy

Foundi C1u Tonll Lid, Vlclnhr:
Cenlelwy. II14-44U83I.

Save Big on Vc)yagera

Shoe
· Rtpolr

WAllER AllEY
Parts-and Service
Mowers - Cbilll Saws

'lost &amp; Found

6

lid. on

MEADOWS SHOE
LEATHER _REPAIR

UCINE
MOWER CLINIC

.

S.tttlay Calla!

on Bloden ROIId
·PH. 614-258-6160

lid.; . lnl

Qlvu:=.Oid TNCk Bed
Fot Junlt

And · Old
Phone:l14-

L.ool: ~ aft a al •l•d trtk..
bluo
~ K-Airloul

4/29/93

5-5·93·1-

•
•••

......
.. ,__.
Pl-.
-onllghl._....._

2112/92/lfn

o••·
614·992·7144

992·3577

OFRCE ................................................,.,_.,...... 112-2186

(Ito

CJHkiHd
Mlddlepert,

IIOIRS:
·· -·hi. 10100.2:00
. CLOSED THURSDAY

oomE TURNERR Broker......................- ....... 11112-56112
BRENDA JEFFE S ................................ - ........ 11112'3056
DARUNE STEWART........................................ 11112-Q&amp;S
SANDY BUTCHER ..-...-........................... - ... 11112·5371
JERRY SPAADUNG ............................... (304) 982-3418

Doctors seeing possible immune disorder~
in children ofmothers with implants

;;aj

Mltltlleport, Ohio

_ . . . . ,, ..., .. '1; .. .........

-hlna ....... ,..... -

614·992·7643

Plumbing

TUDE

on124,14pa

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENJ'IAL
FREE "ESTIMATES

....,.

317 II, 2ntl St.

PlOATLAI'ID -If ywrolooking lor lhat oum~n~~r home on
the rivllr, W8'vo got it. One to two bedroom farm house
hu new windowo, 2 cor garage, 2 bams, and an old
ohiakan houMiitting on apj)IOX. 131 OOIWI, wilh 20 to 25
tillllble oo-.
Aoldng SISO,OOO

"The writers are constantly
coming up wilh ideas on how to
expand the story lines, .. Regele
Real Estate General ·
said. "We pull in the reins if they
go totally crazy."
Bayly, a fn:e..lance director wbo
has made PBS documentaries, TV
commercials and product-market- . 2
,In Memory
ing videos, has used Columliia stu·
Aoborl E. Buell,
dents for outside work.
r
·
Probe.......
• 'I've hired a few students as
In Memory Of
op&amp;a.
LHo K. N•Hiroocl, CIIHII
· Each Monday night, students
productioncoordlnatorsand.associNEVA M. GRIMM
(4) 28; (5) 5, 12, 18, 21;
(612, 6tc
'
learn acting, writing and directing
ate produc:eri, and I've audilioned a
May 5th
skills by produc;ing "Behind the
"··n H-n years
Dumber Or ac•- who bave come
"""opera... he said. ,
,_
PubliC Not. lee
Screen," which is carried on cable
through lhe soap
today ••
television in the Chicago area.
Most Columbia students have
called you to
PUBUC NOnCE
On Monday night, instructors
jobs and take fiVe or more years to
His heavenly home.
Th• lollowlnll woro , ..
Luke Palenno and Ron Bayly help
complete their counes,
01'1, how wa mi.. colvocllpr..,...toy tho Ohio
some 60 students wilh lhe taping at
"Some are~·g back to school
lie~, words cannot Envlronm•ntol Protootlon
997-72~9
· •"· · 30s 0s
50 '
Agency (OEPAI loot wool!.
Columbia, a fme arts school south
m '""'II'
•
•
even s •Or a
tell.
Efl~ttvo dot•• of fln•l
oflhe city's Loop.
·A~ond career," Bayly said. "No
- ond luuano• daM
NEW USTING- SR 124 Racin&amp;- 170+ acra l8llll, includes
~
Hef brlgl'lt · happy ootlono
"Ken; you're not looking at the
old
bam, houae. newer bar, and a milk house. some
can really teach you about
face we loved 80 . of propoood acaono •nd of
.
' college
lancing.
trailer hook-ups, 2 TPC water tapa, land
monitor. That's not tbe shot! soaps.
the outside world, but this is as
well.
dr•lt octlono ore at•tad.
tillablalpulunl
wilh most timber.
$75,000.
"The ac;tor who plays Sylv1e close as you can get."
You've got 10 get your nose out of
Flnol action• m•y b•
But In our hearts, oppoolod, In writing, within
the scripL You're calling shots that has been wilh the soap since the
'
REDUCED! SYR~CUSE·
1988 modular with lour
sl'la Is with us still; 30 do'f• of tho doto of lhlo
bedrooms,
2 baths, decking, ooma ·appliancaa. part
Time may l'laal, but It notlca, to Tho Envlronmen"
lenced yatd. metal atorage building, central air. 314 acre.
nav.t- can mend
., Boord of Rovlow, Am. 300,
Very Nic81
NOW ASKING $45,500
..--rts will .. _ 231 E. Town l!L, Columbuo,
For Our ,,..
.,. OH., 41215. Nolloo of •ny
POMEROY • Wolle Pen Rd.- 35+ acies with 1975 2
broken until tl'l1 :f::':ohlllbeftloclwfthllo
bedroom mobile home, appUances, large front porch,
end.
or wlthln 3 doy o•
.
Tl'lanks for the load Propoood oct1ono w111 ~. shed, 101ne fencing , ASKING SIS,IOO
NEW YORK {AP) - Two doc· implants," ~said. · .
. · . ed that the silicone gel In· the
boc- final uniMo • wrllo
TEXAS RD- 23 acres with 2 story farm home 3·4
you tiel pad us ton odjudlcotlon hoorlng
lOIS say they are seeing what may
Dr. M. Eric Getshwm, ch1ef of implants altered the immune sysbeaooms, TPC water + well, .some fenced land, most
carry; '
roquoot 1e oubmlttocl within
be symptoms of unusual immune rheumatology, allergy and clinical tems of laboratory rats. Studies 10
paSIUIV &amp; tillable, born&amp;, shedl, lruil traes.
$75,000
30
doyo
of
tho
loouono•
disorders in children of mothers immunology at the University of determine the effect of implants on
doto; or tho director rovlowilh breast implants, and they are California at Davis, also has begun the human immune system are
EAGLE RIDGE· 2 slrlry IIVnle home willl 3-&lt;t bedrooms,
oolwlthdr... tho propooed
a beautiful action.
112 basement, TPC water, 1 + acre with 2 cor garoge,
studying whether the silicone is a study of what he said seem to be under way at Dow Corning and
Any poroon moy
palllld road. nice locallonl
ASKING $18,000
.
getting into lhe breast milk or the symptoms of imniune disordelll in elsewhere.
memory she left oubmll oommonta Mellor •
'
womb.
the children of mothers with
The company said it had c!Qne
behltld.
muting
rhft
WE'RE READY TO SERVE YOU'RE NEEDSI
of ...
one study to tonk for silicone in
"It would be unfair to the implants.
Loved and MIIIMd 1 action wlthJn 30 I
do• lndlolltocl. "AaUon", u
women to say this is definitely a
Neither Levine nor Gershwin breast milk of mothers wilh
By Children, uood obovo dooo
problem, or not a problem," one of would elabOrate on their studies, implants and didn't find any. Dow
HENRY E. CLELAND..... _;_._.....- ....................882-11191
lnoludo rooolpt of •
Grandcl'llldl'ln
the doctors, Jeremiah Levine of saying it was too early to draw any Corning stopped making breast
KATHY CLELAND...--.............................,........ .99M111
compllllnL If olanlfloontpubo
implants
in
March,
1992.
Schneider Children's Hospilal in conclusions.
llo 11\lllr•t ufalo, • public
New Hyde Park, said Tuesday. But
In a statement, Dow C:o.rning
m.Ung ..riY bo hlld. Ao Ia
he added, "There's reason to be Corp.,, a develQp~r of s1!1c~ne
Public. N.otlce
concerned and there's reasoii''tO&gt;·- b~t l!flP)anfS •.~d. there !S .. no , ·
look: at it a bit beuer."
convmcm~ se1enbf1C ev•&amp;:nce !0
ORDINANCE NO. 1271-113
Levine, a pedi atric gastioen- show that III.'Planf;S cause disease m
An Orcin- Amend
terologist, said he has examined a women "': •n chtl~en nursed by
Ord. 1262·112
a. It ordolned by the
dozen children of mothers with m~ w•lh ~ •mplants.
Council of th• Village of .
implants and has.seen sevem chit- . We c~rtai'!IY are ~xtr~me!y
Mldcl1p0rt
• lollowo:
dren with intestinal complaints. mterest~ m th1s .Quesuon, sa•d
Soc.
I.
That
Ord. 1262·83
When he examined lhem, be said, Mary Ehzab_eth Jac~bs, who has
Ia horoby amended to reed
he found an unusual collection of been followmg the ·~sue .for the
• followo:
symptoms that could be character· Food and Drug Admlni,ttrabon;
Houelhg Spaclollet
.
'
.
istic of immune disonlelll.
Last y~~r. the FDA. restncted
......... st ,055 per month
S••· II. Thlo Ordlnonoa
•'Then, looking back in the his· sales of sihcc_JM breast 1mplants 10
aholl lob offoct and be In
tory, the only thing that_, unusu- ~omen needing breas~ ~~~­
!Ucaust quslily MVtr goes 11111 ofllylt
force from •nd oftor tho
a! was that the .mothers had tton or to tho~e part•c•~atmg m
uriiMI
dolo
u
permitted
Vinyl coated, polyeser woven
experimental trials of the 1111plants.
by IIIW.
•
meal'l, bl'f!athes for cool,
Oile FDA concern was that breast
Pouod tha 28th day ol
I
implants might be somehow discomfortable use, cleans easily,
April, 11113
.
rupting the immune system, trigA-t: Tori Hockman, Clark
gering a reaction that could lead to
Dowoy M. Horton,
Preeidant Of Council
disease.
(5) 5, 1tc
In March, Dow Corni,ng report:
.
'
BOSTON {AP) - John le
Carre master of the spy novel, says
fewe; people may read his books
now that the Cold War is over. And
that's just fme with him.
·
"I wouldn't wish tu write that
stuff any more and I was terribly
tired of it," said the creator of
'
"The Spy Who Came in From the
· Cold' ' and "The Russia House."
· Le Caue' s next novel, "The
Night Manager," d~als with the
$".t,50
.
world of armscdeahng an4 nar$66~ SALE ..
.
. ..
cotics ttaffic.
·
· · He 101d a BosiQII Bar Associa"'"·''till.
'
' .
tion gathering Monday night that
the end of the Cold War waa a
."kind of professional regeneration," adding: "Maybe .my usdul- .
ness is over. Bul I'm gomg 10 have
far mOO: interesting lhings to write
.MON.-SUN.
about."

-=======::;

BUY • SILt •

:::0.
-:, ~·=·
mloo. tth-onriiMollt

New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

38904 Ll•dl•t

THE BOOK
BARN

I

I a ,......_
....

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

DAVIDSON'S
PlUMBING

4-1V-V3-Ifn

-b- -.: :
I

:r..l,7. - -

To

·HAUUNG: Llmaatone,
Din, Gravel and Coal
LICENSED lnd BONDED
PH. 614-992-5591
12-5-tfn

(614)
667·'6628

• tiiMIIII ..
-~~~~·--..: dd

.....
fMio.

~Otll -

_ s=.~~'fl~s•

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVAnNG

............. ..., • • 1111,

Y. HP..$200.00
YM 2 h1utlllers.

9Jt7-$275.00
16x7-$450.00
ALSO- TRY OUR NEW
VINYL SEAL TRJ!t'
S1.00 PER FT.

R&amp;C EICAYAnNG
BULLDOZING
PONDS
' SEPilC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES

•DOZERS •BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

-. .......

INRALLED PRICES . OPENERS INSTALLED

POIIIIOY, OliO

J &amp; THOME

s:.:ab..i~~~=:1~: =·~to:..:..:::::;

.... ,_, ....

217Lioc... st.

742·2455

!;

.CIIIm Form. Cllllmanla may
r-uut tho SRF Proof of
• .,
Claim Form by writing to tho
Superintendent at Ohio
Stoblllilltion Aeurvo Fund,
P. 0. Box 2$7112,
Columbuo, Ohio' 43226·
7112. Bo adviood lh•t •ny
claim preaonled to th•
Superlnt•ndent which lo
poatmorkod altar November
f2, 1993 aholl bo forever
barred .. to all parD•, and
n'o payment ohell be mode
nor any ocUon molntolned
on the clolm . The
Suporlntendon~ •• ooon •
le ..onably poulblio, will

..,_

---·--

,..,_m•••rmot..................
....., ,, .......

RAilED PANEL GAUGf DOOI

992·5335 or ·
915-3561

Side Ill Rd. ICo. 7)
IUIWI,OII.

to =c:: .

.

IEN'SDft'llNCE
SERVICE

MORRIS
'EQUIPMENT

.

. &amp; VIcinity

1

.....11111 Or We

FIIIAIKIIIG AVAIWlE

:::r.Y

::;:;.·~~~i..·s=FPf.~:'.,';~ ~oYo:::r:.R:' ~-:ll::

ALLIMIU

3 HP ·11 HP

=••

•(.!!::.

Potnefoy,

MICROWAVE OVIN
••• VCR REPAIR ·

MINI KARS

ulrrP.m-.

.

Giveaway

lllddleport

oc1..,

1

·

.
ll
/
. Oh
.. . , Jo.h;n,_.' I. t.'s. ~ co... ,ege
......, . course.
Jl 4
··
t
'
h
0 h, 1 Yl arS a.' l S a SOap 0 Pera.
ln
.
.,..

1

clllim pr-18d. You will
verified compllllnla, ..,., """'River
10
01
Also
. , if B.P. plans to dcducl
...
onlr
rocoln
written
n;:::·-o~'-no"-·of
--• FeolllyO.Crlptlon:llunlc.
$1001000 for "bl!sii!C!S!! expenxs," Portloneof-ltnetfrom
lpecWIO 11-3
communlutlon If your
8011ono, ond eddl· 0.1 o.s
he had bell« keep copies of all the
a. 11 ordolned by tho clolrD 1• ••J"'Ied by tho llonol lnformoUon. Unto.. Permft No. OPSCIGIIU'ED
receipcs along wilh ,the name of the Counoll of tho Vlll~~ge of' Suf*lnt.n..,L
othorwl.. provided In Thlollnlleollon n.:J::""~ ·
ddl.....rt• followo:
(4) 28; (5) 5, 12, 3tc
Notlooo of portloulor
propaoed
on"
bimbo he wined and dined, !he name
Soc. L Thot Lola 101, 110,
~~-..,.,111-muniOIIDono 1o opp·lob'o to EBR.
1
of her company .and the purpose of 111, 112 ond 111 which
o....
oonl to: Hoorlng
F2VV0&amp;0283
all !bole "me r:iap." The law, U border IIIII Stroot and
Clerk, OEPA, P. 0 . 8ox1041, Final loouonco of flndlngo'
eDIICted by Congress. spcc:ifte:ally -nd lrCim North Fo1,1rth
Columbuo, OH., 41211-0141 and ordoro undor ORC
· f
1
lwo. '""' to tho •ll•y •••
Public Notice
Ph. (114) 144-2111. c-ult Chop, 8111
requires this 10 ormat on to horoby riiZOnod from lh•
OAC Chop. 3741 ond OAC VIU• of PornorO'f
document the dc:dnctjoo Aaumq oxlotlng Spoolol cla.. l- IN THE PROBATE; COURT Cliopo. 3745-47 ond 3748·5 Boonl of Public Allolro
B.P. C111 provide this clocumenlllioa,' llcolloo 10 ~.
.
OF MEIGS COIINTY, OHIO lor foq
II 320 E. Mo1n 8L
only IK) percent of the 111101111t is
S.C. II. Thlo Qrcln•nc• JENNIFER I.. SHEETS,
Rn11onoo 0 1 ,..,.. PoiiiOrO'f, 9H.
ohlll IIH effoot and bo In Admlnlotnrblll
of NPDE PMnlt
EffocUvo Dolo: 0111112113
deductible. If enJM:ted, President lor co from ond oltor tho of tho eo.... of
VIU• afPamoroy
Aoollvlng Wotoro:
• Clinlon'stax IIOJ"-'S willckopthia -'loot doto u pormlnod ·Guy E. Hunlor, D
ocl,
Ohio River
3~~"':;_kAfloln
to SO percent. -SAN FRANCISCO by IIIW.
P.lllloFeclllly DoeorlpUon: Munlc.
ACCOUNTANT
Puoed tho 12th do'f ol
VI ·
~==-=·~~: 06IOI/83
0.1 too.s
olwt SAN FRAN: According to AprU, 1813. ,
TH~ ESTATE OF ·
(I) 5, ttc .
Nc~ wben Preaidalt
A-t: TeriHookmon,Ciork
deli(:lrUI'
..1'
...___II. Horton, ~!~.'!.~H.~HJ.E.R.
Real Estate General
lc:lt office, there was a
ICit"'
Pr~ofCouncll
Roopandonlo
$78.9 billion. After eight yean ~ (5) 5, 1tc
~= ~P=
PlaicleDI Jetpll, the clefic:il WU
NOTICE BY NOnFICA110N
•'
$212.3 billion. After four yea ~
TO: Tho Unknown Holn,
l'lelicJem BUlb. the deficit is up 10
Noxt of K~t f'r~:::.::
' $331.8 biDion: Somdlody bu to pay 1'---:P:-ub:-1::-lc-::N::-ol-::1-ce-- Log•t-,
for this. That "Somebody" is you
~~ur,r-H::.,~C~
•
and me, bub. And, lee US notforlct NOnCE OF CLAIMANTS •' Bolloy Hunter, Sr., lotU.
il is Congress who OK'd the OF THE STASIUZATION · J - ~ Hunlor, 111.-airot
•'
e~
. "";'IIII'CS.
RESERVEto~D
Gorron ond lolibuo
A.,.......
Purouant
Section lomo
G
.I
Gem of !he Dtty: If you had your 3701.11 of tho Ohio Rovloocl
'::'
nolfled
205 North Second Ava.
life to live over again, you'd nee;d Codo and Sootlon 33 of thot you hove been named
.
•
·-~ddle~!l~ Qlt - ...
more money.
Amndod hnololilll No. Reopondonto In 0 legal
BALL
RUN
AD.
- AI by youroeN in the c;ountiY
LoMJOIM? Take chllrgt of yoiiT i:-O:blth.,
~:"), 0:.~ •oUon enUUod Jonnllor L.
doocriboo lhio homo with 3 bedrooms, illrgo living room,
lift tUld tiiTII it fJTOwtd. Write for romolnlng · money• of the lhooto, Admlnlotrotrlx of
·clnlng room, litling on .52 ilc... Hu on older log house
AM IAIIdtrs' lltW booklet, "How IQ 8tob1Uzollon ROHrYo Fund
~ ~EE.':'!i
MIOM the IOOCI ond ofler bulldlngL
517,1100
Malee Friertds and Stop Btirtg (BRF) will be dlotrlbutocl
D•Yid G. Hunlllr, Doa 111 oc1,
RACINE -Manual Ad. -Ate you looking for hunting land
Lonely.· Send a ~lf.G!JdrumJ,tong. ~~r!~~n":~!::.:'.~ ot ... Thlo .auon hoe ' - '
or
• poeoible building lite. We have just lhe place.
busineu-siu tiiYelopt 1411d a clltd: tho
wore orlglnell'f :=g\':' PC::3tn':· 1:'•:::
, '
Approx. 16.82 ooroo.
,For onl'f $1,500.
or mtJMY order for $4.15 (tlris illEooh
Common Plo.. Court of
RUTLAND - Now Limo Rood - Spacious lo~ 3Yo ac!Vs
cllllks poSIOifl allli lwld/illg) w:
ll•lge County, Ohio,
in toW!! ond a culo giiiSIOibrood trimmed 1)I atoiY home
Friends, c/o AM Landers, P.O. Br»e
Prob•t• Dlvlolon, Sooond
with ~ bodroomo, 3 pardleo ond equipped kitchen· which
11.562, ChicntM,/11.
606114)562.
'Ill
Stroat,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
-o•
•·
lnouronaa (Suporlntondontl 457611.
has bHn i9modolod, Formtlt~S.OOO,
CIJIIOda, send $S.ll5.)
within 1&amp;0 day• oftor tho
Tho object of lho PoUtlon
·
Avollabla •• $25,000
Superlnt•ndl!nl oompll•• lo to dotormlna tho holra,
~
with tho atotutory notlao
1 1 kl · d
POMEROY -Old UniOn Avo.- Two blg11ota wilh a littta '
over 1/3 oca M tho lllld ol the ~ lila • 1983 CIBY\On .
:·
· dolblowldo,wllh I bod1001no. 2 boll)~. flllni!Y room, dliling
•
E. Hunter, D-••od, In
1 • claim to order lhat • cllotrlbulon of
ruom, 01\d • new front pon:h. Kllchan ·I• equlppod.
'
/
IRF moy
the Super ntondent by full'f old ....
be modo.
including • now'clllhwuhor. HOI c:onll8l air, ond • Mlor
ooflonor. All in good conclllon.
.
SIS,OOO.
h

o.-AalntmSewnl_,
qo, I diWiced my wife, "Bca," for ,

glv.:::,.:':. . . MY:: :v~::-,..pt R~;:,:lce

~::::..
....
..__

3 •

Ttte .D ally

•I

.

,,

.,

�1~The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy . MiddlepOrt, Ohio

wectnelday, May 5,1193

__ _
""' .....
.-

Hou'Mhold

...........

Goods

121,0111114 . . Ull

72 TIUCIIa tor Sill

NEA Crouword Puzzle

..... .,. ,., ...

1MZ ., P _.,_ Pllll Up. NM
Polnl. Noor , _ , Dloiol. a
-ToTiwo.-.1......,

·-.......

,.,._
.. ,_... II., -

ACROSS .
1 ..., ••

PHILLIP
ALDER

.
-. dlopoot,Ohlo.

-·
_ ,_

1• GIIC Truok-.. ar •,._
-

___
_
.. ....
For...._-.
.....
-

od'"" ...._

"' loolhor

cool, -

alai~NO;-• ... 114 . . 21M,

•

by

••
•Ku

NORTII

Ullllly

~ olwli:Cif!PIL

+uuu
EAST
+KI07
.Q J I5

.

For . . . . . . . ct.! ~ A._iiD Oood Cloon

t!OhZ

+KS

EverythlftiJ -1$100 . _

3010.

SOOTH

For Solo: Nlnlondo Erillllalll-

+QJ5Z

vans &amp; 4 wo·s

73

mont Svllom Wllh WI·2212.
lind I T - $100 Call
114 Ill

'1117 Oadgo

•Au

cw..... -.

tAQI
+QJIO

=..:..:.:==-----1----------,...--------~-1111"or r lr,good-lon,
PowTrlm..,
lruiaMrlr. ~!:.;':', ~~
._r•d •. , 54 .Miscellaneous 61 Fann Equipment 1r1p1,--~
Plln aulll ·
von,
Wood

0..

Uno

_.
1

MlrchandiH

o.n.lo

N,..lon Prod Milo
Amino Add 8odv
BulldlftiJI.a:"'llhl and flil
ufa. Anlloblo .,..
!fuolvolr 11 Rllo Aid - ......,.
Tho ........ Eo dlor.
.
IMIU~ftiJ

•

All real eslate adVertising in
11'1is nQwspaperis sub;act to
the

·Good Uood Eloctrlc RoftiJO, 110,

Rentals

fedefal Fair Housing~ :

o1 1968 wtlich mol&lt;es Illegal

Won1od:

Fur~llmo

Bortondor,
Ewpononc.
fo
RofoNneoo
Nocoooory, Oppo&lt;tunlly For Ad·

vtncement. tend R.-ume To:
CLA 268, elo O.IHpoll&lt;o DollY

• Trlbuno,_!\25 'lltlrd a .. nuo, Gol·
llpollo, un 45631. .
Will core lor oldony malo or
tomolo In my llomo. Stoto op' provod. Cortlflod •ld on duly. 24
" ~hr~.co~ro~.3M~-~~~~==·~
.. ----~
Womon; lloko moro rnonoyt
FrH olghl -lob proporoUon

to advef'lise ·any preference,

limitatiOn or OiSCri"*'l.lion

••cca.

448 3811.

ad~erllsemenls tor

reatesr•

loodorl. ""'
· oond,\
Hollond lroJ b !::~no. ~ llW3il.
$2100. Bnllh hOa. .,.. type, 1
112 I, tl~ No."t oorn jllcloer 74
Motorcycla
w/rllrlo, ww. HI 1111' IF rirodol, ~':""":;:;,:;,::.:;.:~:;...=~
$11.,000. _ , .
1114
Conclllon,
·~·-· ~.":."'J 114 2411111

63.

c- -

Ll·---ock

.._......... ·

._

aP'Ony'oFor-.114-241.fOBl
304oo115&amp;-1583.

55

on an.,.,...

opponuniy DOSis.

lnlormollon on boby cnclo bull

5301 collocl onylln)o.

Supplies

c~·
-

Blooll, brtc11, -~- winlnlolo, ole.
.,-..., Rio
Orondo,
~I Wino
814-

24WI21.

~ 32x48x12

••!r

ono 11&amp;11
ng - · .,. 3
11011 oni,Y - . onclod price
PNclolon Fromo
Bid,.., •-4141 or 304-7731341.
Two11'1"111._
m:u.n·
ootllng,-8,.,.
_....,

A.

81oroqft

WELL,ACTUALLV. I
KNOW WIIAT'S 601N6
ON. SOT I'VE SORT
OF L.OST TRACK ·'

'"'"";r'
.....

.,_-.771-1141........

EIR TREE SERVICE. l~,
Trimming, Troo Removal,
o
Trimming. Froo Eotlmotool 8

42 Mobllettomes

uc.

=:."-.z. ~ • ., -

, . . . Ill.

11111

114

•••· ,_.

eo_.,

Doop , , _ , -llhopo $100.
.,, 2111211

rloo,rrlul,$71.
.

For Sole: 1110 Clleckmobr Sid

S C E PI

FCOV

DP

-D 1D

W•

Evtn.-, olackploro

76

........

....

IM•P•••,...,.
to,eilcnomo'
.....
'

Schnouzor, ,., -

~~-.

old, 114-

Rocl-, 12D; l 2 o1ra1n. Rog. EftiJIIoh lluO Tlok !'upo, 4
-~.
~"
ron
...
,~ -· llontho ~. Champion
.
Zl"'· ~ng ' •~: -~ 8-lno, 1-1117;
Roglotwod Hl ..ltyon ldttono,
bluOISMI
(1CIInlo,
moloo/
t.mll'-, 1200 NOh, ouh. no

=:..:?:

· - -.
1114 Dedao

110 ,

~Pti0"'11::

eon-- v...

••

W
.
.
oaon

lolloo~

Rearrange letters of
0 four
scrambled words

Atceaorle•

: BoRN

tolna NO Slflll- Pyrolhroldo.
For !logo a Cotol J D North
PorducO-.

~J«)T'.....

'iOO "'OIMIC.
l)l.ttur.,OR.
5(tli£Tlllllt:.1'

~

&lt;MJeo.JrWD.
0
0

Wonlod to bur '1\1
i11111
Bollio
running
or~--gan ........ _,. -

w1n ""'riood prtOo.•....,._

1r11121.,

1114 N - ~. t110 ar

.
,
.
-drtv·-·...,,_

,

,

··~··""-

MY rA.iA::RITe &amp; lA£:k IS
L..EFTCJ\iER PIZzA .. •VMQ'&amp;

-

~ FA\.ORITE~

. · cARROT STJc:::IQS
AND AAOieH

l((:eETTES.

SOMETIME€&gt; I THINK.

"c

51-lS MUE&gt;T
FROM
ANon-IEQ. PLANET.

rrlu bod, lull rrlu - .
c~rtne. ""'· 111 141 2100 ..._ 1 to I, nc conc1, 30418:2-HII.
·'
1111 PontillO FINblnl auto., AC,

--

VWY aood 00-lon. ft,IQ,
I14'44J.414t oftor I p.m. "'

1117 9!MVJ ._rum, E x Condition, WIA :.Onfloo. 814-

o-,

Auto,_ 4 Cyllndoi, F... lnjoollon,
ACA PS, 1'1, Qood Tlr:M1 ~
l uno GoOdl Noor '""'"' Noor
. -llyotom, $3,200, .,.....:

.,...

'

Improvement•

'""'1~.-2_1,_1
awn.. AilllleoDriven, •lllt-lM01001.
.

W.trERPAOOANII
Uncondlllallll .,...._ ~

· ounrool,
lrnllie.
..... olr,
Cruloo
-aont-.
11on,
~-NI17.

moo.

21

Suppl1rs

&amp; LIVI'~IOCK

Blocldtum'o

Roanna.

Homo

-uno.

AITRO·OBAPB

Cui-·-

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

........

31 Hontel for Sale

~·na
IIAtwood

SJO,OOO, . - . - .... .. ,.. .,......,_

=
J!':i
=:. - .......
::-Wilt. 1121

3

~a.....: 11om. •

710,

011 II.

·

2bdrnt., ful .... •...1 oiOM co
town; largo pnl, $11,000~

a ...... ,_ -

.-n ionllr .,.RoJio.m
.

·

...,.
IW,
no

"lnl... ,......
_.,ry- .... hi , ••lor••

..... ...

moko .- . •144111-7117, · - lion mlllod., ,.._, I04.e'l!lllt24327.
'
,820.
.
.

lototlo
Tonk
Pu-;~;ao
Co. RON
EVANI
111'111-,
ollo"-"OHI

r.1erchandiS8
HOU$8hold

&amp;:=~;;r:

-1111.

z:s. .... -

-.-,_ ·

~

.

H .lurrll Con, lomo ...... 114-

-lful Ito
:::.,.111 ~ ,.,.,,.:--::; 51 .

114-•11111 .Allor I . P.ll. ,Labo

Wool!- AnrQ1no.

'

.....
-- ....

IIUIIOI.

•

WV,

tHO aoyton 1oou-.
pump, doCII. , _ - -·-.
.
bolhl; locolod on 1o1 In Roclno ~ I - · "'!!!'J.....Eioclrto,
near wl: cis, WlfY nice, Drtnw.y, ...~
... •N,UW flnrl.

MNOII.
211

114 . . 2001,

17,GOC!
llloo,
Ellolrlo....,
..._
.Reoa•
Cloon, ..,..

Turtro Haad,

J:! 'i0•140'd'
=-~-~·i::t"0:~=.
H' Wolk
lillloll.
.,
.......
111=., Bldg

~

'

Wll buill polio - . ~

GOods

1--..,-....,;.~.,:;;:.--....,..
111'12 Corpoit M All YlnYI In

84

Eleclrlctll •

I

Retftgeratlon

'lllooll M .4t Ytl. 11-.oir Cor·

.....,11.7N-.IM-44&amp;-11U4.

::c ,_

On
$711
bench,
110;
I~JOOfJ
,_
, ;r-.
: wo
4pm.

•

r

Qlrl'o

o-r - · Wllh

...•'
~·

f:

· K,.,... il power lhel you can uae to
profilable edvanttge in the year alltad.
llon1 *"'-~~~ y o u - - f1ingl
your field of·-""TAURUI (Aprll2£,.., 10) Try to be a

"" ... """"in ..

~·'" iniiNd of • pmvoUr in ...
CUIOiona wilh your . . . lodiJ. Boll of you
might a low 11iriCiing point- could
~
-lor
tbrrwa - you'l lnl I. The AIIFI&gt;&amp;allh
MIICIW II H ~-lily .-11 rrignl

"'...., v-.

IJ"~-~~~·~·~-~·:u~c.:d~l'r\~~-~1,

-. Pur ..loolret, CAl
·~
••-. I 1 d
llullt. In "
- Chlrl'a ••• ...
·
. .
1 4 2201
,.

I

Is y,!

I II

I ·1 Is 1 I I
T UD AL

___.;:.....;,,..=....,;.;_:;~.

1--

L-.J..--I.L-..1..---1.---J ~ ·

We had spent several hours

at the park sw=,::ias and
gnats.
My
·
commented that picniCS would be

.--..------·...., much more fun if they could

r_,.; ~ ~U~;. . :.:. R~,.;:~ E~;. .:.,B1..---ll

. ....,.L
• ....,..L
. ....,..L
• .....J.
L.,;_,L,....,.L

; C : I : ; : chuckle quoted
by filling in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

SCIIAM-LETS ANSWERS

.J:..•

Sphinx - Vouch - Bench - Daring - HANG UP

The teenage girt stepped into the phone boolh 11
the I*;JIIa in line moaned. "Don't wooy." she said, ' I'm

just calltng my boy- friend so I can HANG UP!"·
«:1 1993 TV Olta Teen

itS L.P.

F! Wonn TX

MAY5

are romantically perlecl lor Y.O~. Mail $2
plus a long. eelf-addreeaed. stamped eovalope 10 Ua1C11maker, c/O this newspaper,
P.O. Box 4485. New York, NY 10163.
GSW"(RRtry 21-Jurte 201 Responlllbilities
which you should peraonally auend to
shouldn't be cast oil on others today,
eor-se~y, oleo p&lt;ottct yoursefl Iron\ lhli
"peerry" role.
CANCER CJtrne 21-July 221 Be ture you
you'relaiiUng 1boi1U you oller a
lrirnl IO arcirl or buoineu JtdVice IOday. If
anything QOH wrong, you might be held

one'ssBtislaclion Ieday if both pan!es have

targeted diflereot objectives. There must be
a collective purpose.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 211 AnythlftiJ
you do oul of spite loday could have a
boomerang efleCI, and you could be hurt
more than the party thai you 're trying lo
penalize.
CAPRICOAN (Doc. 2Z.Jin. 10) Conditions
In genera l are rather louchy loday.
Something you'll .,.ant to change IO your
benll~ COIIId lum out to be detrimental lo
anolher
II:QIIFrllaCie.
AQUARIUS (Jirn. 20.FI!I, 111 II you and
Lf.O (oluly 23-Aug . 221 If you 're loo you• male have a dilagreement IOdly, .lly
a..,rtive loday in dealing with olhers. It to resolve 11 privllely. II you air HIn the
111111!1 pmduc:e en unon~~ reaction. Try presence or others, resolution could
10 be a boolllr, not a 0111-IP!lO'nted bOis. become very complicalad. .
¥lltGD (Aug. 22-loop!. 221 fl a clo8e 11110- l'tiCf.l (Feb. ~ 20) Probloml with
ciate does tomllhing you dlalike IOday • ..,.-.,.could erupltOcMoJ OYer l1't4hodl
bring t h e - Oul inla lhe open 10 lhal M ·arid · ~. Each muotlry 'to PIOinolld
con blow ''-'· Don'tllllter in silenCe and . . glliMI good inllltd ot gnttlfying hit or
IIJOI your*'·
her own ogo.
LIIRA (lepl. 21-0cl. Ul Something ARII!I (Mitch 11·Aprll ltlln Yl&gt;Ur com·
you'ra - . c l in hU p!Oiilable polenllal, men:lalai!Us tOday, be prepared for il1lngl
bul ~ migi1C noc come oboul u quickly u to be, a 1111 tougher ..., UIUOI, "''llfttleel Of
JOU anticipate, nor prOduce the types of wllelher you're 11)8 byyor cir lhe Hiler. Each
,.._larwhil:tl yqu'ra hoping.
COIIdlllon muot be hondlad akNilully . .
~N jOrot. 14-Nov. 211 Panne~Whip Thu!Qy, May 6, 1993
omilr . .r•ill oren, lplto work OUIIO tny·

llnow-

Cllrond Prll, b1uo

- -·looclool. n.ooo - .
..., aood -.ttlan, - IINo,

Real Estate

l

DoCiuo'

11111
ClldoPW, Aocl \41, Auto,
O,.Y u
lntorlor,
Nloo
Corlll.-.
·
1114.

010,

I

~

Condllkin,l2,100 t14-21f.lll17.
11111 c:onw. .............
.....lonl_lon $1000tllbll, 114 111 • •
'

$11,01111

I

1__,.
w.._,

1... PIJmouth Colt, Vorl Qood

-loo

be·

tobllolrool' 1m.

37NS02.

11191

the

.... LMol ......... """""'""·
Coli
OroR.,
·0418 " io-

Fan1 T - GL lpoo1o I Etc. rroo Eotlmotoo, Ro-:
.
~.IIC.PS;AWFIII--. -.114-441-M13.
PM, ~ lloogo, 14,310, t14fdflll

UW ·

-IIEHT

Chivy

--~CIT,Nd.PS,

Fmancial

-

Home

1117 Parrillo "-lio, OIC
0:0. IOM71-

'~·

Serv1ces
81

=-.=n.

A. The phrase you're looking for is
DERNIER CRI, which is pronounced
"der-nee-ay KREE." The French ex·
pression literally means "last cry,"
and it's used as a synonym for the
English phrases "the last word" or
"the newest fashion ." This term came
into English at the end of the 19th century; it's been almost 100 years, in .
fact, since DERNIER CR.I was the
latest fashion.

WEDNESDAY

2111111

1117 Ford T - GL 2

By Jeffrey M~ualn
PROSELYTE ( "PRAH-suh·lite")
tries to change or convert somebody
to another religion.' Spell the start of
verb PROSELYTE like PROSE
whenever you write.

sion for "the latest fashion" that uses
CRY. Can you tell me what it is?

MORTY MEEKLEAND WINTHROP

.I-

.,., .,......._ .....
a

OUR .LANGUAGE

Q. I know there's a French expres·

MotOr Hom...

Belt Ofllr. fit ttl IID'I.

•

OF' COORS£...

[ Dlllfli KNYtl n£ ru&gt;~
·~ IN lll5 a:FIC£
.

TlEifO!IT-

_.,

cam-"
,..,.,

WCLO .

loy CLAY I . POlLAN

~ L A G0 L .
2
I. I I 1 I .

l

IIIXU51',

1882 Shollt FrlondohiJ&gt; 14 ft.
Solf.Conlolnotl, N:, lllaollorrl
l:locll!'
DovtLoodocl,
chocllo, 114-112-21117. .
. '1:.~~-111 1222. Condition, •a.ooo, ~
•
•
WHAT'S 80 DIFFERENT ABOUT
18~ 1'11111 WIIHI CIIF1d:
THE HAPPY JACK 1-X FLEA 11811 Audl 40110 Cll, 17,000 mlloo, "'lctmpOr", ..... ..., - - -

COLLAR? IT WOAKIIIII Can-

•

low to form four simple words.

=..,;.::::;;;;::::;=.;::;;:...,....,.
1883 ChoVJ 414 plclr,. lruoll

Converl-.

TKOOX

~~~~~~ S@\\cillA-~£;,s·

..

Auto Pans &amp;

LRIIU-,l.oodod, ..,IOO·'Itcl 1 .
¥11.
C
ik.~ 79
~

DPt

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "II'S not .prosperity or pleasure lh81:1
bul lhe maturing of the froul." - Charles Colson.

.

iii.-:Di ~-~ -

CV

HLLNKPF . "

~·~r=::Z ·=Chov·~-- an.-~~,.
PoodiM:

2

A L D G X - H L N ,D 0

0

ia~:J~IItTTor;.,;;;ror;;;miii'

11111 4 WD Eilglo. 1100, 114-17t-

b

C V

CV

Pontile lonnevllle, exc
r;irtiiiiiirwi,",UU.ea;;id"iio
oond lrwldo &amp; '0111. No Nil, VinJI N N, til rypoo, IIO!IIna II HI;
lrp; 304-tl24ttl.
ownor 814-245-~ l1447t
11113 - · Chovy V..., I Cvlln- 2213.
, ·
clor, 4 IIIOOCI. Alii~ $1,1100; ~ 1on11o, ton 1ruo1o

1111

Ono Eloctrlc 8 - • • Olivo
Exoollonl Cctnclllon, $100 Ono

7

IDX

UCPJKJNJ

IIHI, \41, ~.
AIM'M
bod. FuiiiiH 112 u.n. s- Nil.
o.c.
WIW .. Child Going No '"'"'.... $71 00 ..........._
To,Collogl, U,MI,I14 4411121. :1110. ~
•
...,..... •.,.
1HS -

I!UIIn!!&gt;J, loiJ,

NXRf(UDD

HEJKUKDP

olloropm.

-.t71-WlV.

-. 1..........

oond.•

...-.. tiOO; • ·' ~ron
- wtmlll\ Mwcury- WI
''"""!.-~a aoso: ~

Rent

-o·

ra
'""
20...,_

UIOd ..., lllllo, ..... 304·7'13o
5805.

CloolJohn-.- _ .......

2Z--=tllgl!,prl00
Mill 10"8, 1M ~·1 tar . .

1

·---

0 K V L

8• Doo 8P lotold WI

W A.
Boot And
Trollor, 40 HP M-ry - .
Labo
or 111
Extrool$1,'1110,
Ad, .,.
.....
. 124 - ·

hDIIII, 11.FDM. fUo.

Porty d.... - ' bl~ ~~-.
lllln - r wlirloln niMII• 1ft.

~· r;

I "

5

Excollonl Condhlon, CoH 11421W318.

for

CrtiiUrt

1'1

:!·=~,~llll

'D

Ttnet1d a ,twollrllilft,ful
b FOM,dooll,2~ .......

au,, .

TransportatiOn

Boot

MN021.

1

10f'~=I

I I " 'I ,

WHV 15 SARNEI'
PVRPL.E 7 .

-...,._

=. ~::\:L...-rz:

DOWN

'I To - liMe

PEANUTS

malchlnt 00¥11',

Rklgo, U -

rore- -

3 Sptn
4 Coloredo lkl
reeorl
5 Soap pllnt
6Notllel
7 Gentllcterlll (tbbr.l

41Mua·

Wlttr, 1114-4CMII1.

-

I

2 I think, tiler•

85 Depollt
86 llrtel ltop
1117- Peulo

A111nlnurn

For Ronl: 2 Ac,_, GIHF1 PI,.,.,For1 Or2-t, 1om l

.

ThNe ' t&amp;jJ

hotel
84 Cloth
menure

Ctu11o!, 1~ HP, More""
-·
Gotor l - I n COndition,
. _ _ Rldl!lll - · I Yoor $3
!00
.Col
.,._1021,
Allor
1
1
Old, 3 8il Or T - For l :w
P...
. . . . 114 31815t1.

Child coro, my homo, Allon
Stroot, c:tto.tor, lltry Dompooy,

38HW7 Aftw 4p.m.

8211oedlkle

Should you attack
or defend?

MZEnE

75 Boats &amp; Motora
' torSele
. Sloto

211-13tl.

- ,..,....::"1clocl,-,...,
.1071.

22 Sharp
prOjtc:tiOnl
2&lt;&amp; DIM
28 Cat IOUIId
211 I.e., 1ft fuH
31 Lock opener
33 White Hoult
ln111811
34 Symbol lor
Iron

ldlultm...t

58 Called
81 AIMI tilt ,..t
lebbr.l

8

Bull.~
Run &gt;~rrrno, Jocklon, Ohio 114- 18

Pt.Pll .. .
Ill. 2. 1112
........
3b
·
.·
-

2 - ....
coli lor 0

Wanted to Do

{poet.I

· orglftllm
55 En111ne
.

Eul
AU pass

I'M- IMI •

·
- oround
. . . . . 1110,
-~ot...,.
tlon
coU 114-152-

614-885-42112.

I'M ~NDIN' THIS
ONE TO TH' .

~~.,_

Norllo

3 N't

111Linatr

21 Without end

50 Btwllcltred
51 Old ...
53 Slftgle-ctHed

Opelllnglead: • 4

SMILE PUR'f!1 TATER!!

·

Well

. Pau

48TVtn'-ll

.:.:Ana.:...,..
.:.::..::...:Anci=-CN~-~-;--0'1--Ia~..,

Building

-

r:sSo!llll
L....~L...J!....,..'=...L:::ll.J.....:.~-IJI 1 NT
•

BARNEY

~ lnlonrlote
-orcyclo,
• 2 JOir

11191 -

~
11191 Y-hiiiO Jll Sid, 114- . 3 - D1oo 131. -h. Rloo'o, - • .WWVI
•...., '
441-0731.
Ton ._lie l:rook Ad all Rt. 12,

-· ---

intormed tnat all dwlingl
&amp;VIilllbte

w-

Vulnerable: Neltber
Dealer: South

11114 ov••
Thu. •.- Elro. olrl.
-·
Umouoln bullo, 21ull -~ 1'UHP
oondllon.
~•.IJid,l
$3400,~.
1111 Clrrlo Cnl, 18ft, 144 hp InHay
&amp; Gralri
ono s· onlry, - 3112 win- 64
boon(
l cxrlb Jnl
CUOo
. _ , ilnet'llll8d roof, . . . . . . .
gulltrlng. ,... ......_ .. W1ll PIJ as. por lb lor l l t - =~:a""'
:aoo
oi
..
I:OOP
,
..
LIHio al~o olol'-o ,_, Millo
Courity ToboOoo OUoiL MW1 12 manthl: to 2T, large big,
Po I lon Pool " - lldrL, Form, Ill. 31,104'NJ.2o11.
$30,11t 1111153.

wnlen Is In violation olttie

are

m.

.7800.

knowingly """""'

Wanted

18

'

Hand pionler, com, (1CIIot- l
new 145. 304-11!J..4HI.
HooVJ II~ ~ Toblo
Wllh
End - Condftlon,
· IO"L
1T'H Good
110,20"W
,,..

This newspaper wll not

1ctvertised In INs MWII)Ipel'

SHuatlon

Plno

Worldng -110. Aolliairotor
Glrdon tutor $11. :JOW713711.
o-. $2'11; 0n11na l'oblo
LJ!Irt, $11; Gun Coblnol$71. 114241441 ,

Umhod Supply 3 For $10. 814-

Hm"al ion or ctiscrlrRrWion:

'11508.

12

Y - · Whb

245-8511\

sex !a milia. I statui or nalional
origin. or any lnlenl.lon to
make any suc:h pretererce.

p=
om ·oymont,

n

Hoohhy

based on race, COlor, raliglan,

law. OUr readel'!l are henlby

m about(a.IOWj,
nontradhkmll
1-1110-

CoiiAftori:J O I Good """"
-1~...... rugo, ••
- : ond
lo~. $1J;. 132 · ullornul,
Pamoroy, unro.
Gun Coblnol, $45, Glo• F...,.

OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
Wnoualll - Toblo W/4 Chain;
Fon looll Raoiii!IIJ Chllr 118;
a.nron Alc:lr Wlly'o ~.oo

=

low

14~:-o·
15 Actor ..,.
EtttVtl
17 Fllhrllll an

tK7 3

, _ IT 'TIIM!e, U . . V4. •·

·

'-'-"

42 - l.lftaue
441nlliii-

48llrollowt Frt.

13 Surrounded

...... ............
AC. PI, PI, I iooleild. M,IOO.

llpM or _ . _ eftwllpM.

For ...., 411 2 .Tralllr1 114 !U 828 I.

12=
org..,

Ollor,- -

Cloon, -

neckw11r

4 Trpe of
orcllkl
lllueblller

35 E11111 ·

3712, ·R 311 Collllll deg.
&lt;&amp;0 8outtl of Ga.

) '

-10

penon.

...
'·

•

�P1g1

16-Tht Dally Sentinel .

Ohio

Wednelday, May 5,1893
•
IIECISTER TO Wll DUR•G

!:E'bocuNo

Ohio Lottery

Cavs take
2-llead in
playoffs

FllOCllMO'S

S141!AJIII¥fRSARfiiAI.E '

~·----------------,

Pick 3:

890

Pick 4:
9699
Super Lotto:

~10.13-33-37J$6

Page4

Kicker:
lll043

•

Phone------------------

.

.

I

•

.

RegieWioct.y •t.your 1001111 Foo.and for your chance to a' •••.•••••• -- ••••••••••••.•••
win - of the grMt prlz• dMcrlbecl below during our
111ur _ . ..... ~ oelebrt~~~on. '"'-'• 110 purCh••
nn nary. Tile grMCI prlzil of a v lion or $3,100 oeah

TYSON'S/HOLLY FARMS
U.S.D.A. GUDE 'I' CHICKEN

Win l . Hawaiian Or
Disney World Vacation

:,-..~0.: ~"':::..~:::; :!.'ii:.i"""

WHOLE
FRYERS.

500. 0~

Or Win s3
.

.

.

.

a1.

In Cash!

Val.44. NO.$
' Multl. . .•lno.

-~
- ·~,· . . ..

.

WEEK 1: May 2through Ma)! 8, 1993- You could win a.. ~:l't•,;,...; ·
free bag of groceries

_

.

3li Bag1 of GI"'Cerl~ Will Be Given Away At Elch Foodlllnd
WEEK 2: May 9 through May 15, 1993- You caul n

\

.,

'

.

' .

Commis~ione.rs

a...

WEEK 3: May 16 through May 22,1993- You could win a•••
1 minute • 35 second shopping spree ~ .
~
A FQOdllnd Shopping Spree Will Ba Awarded At Each Stcn~
- ._
WEEK 4: May 23 thtough May 29, 1993- one lucky ~~mer will win a...
Hawaiian or Disney World Vacation or $3,500.
TRIP FOR 2 HAWAIIAN VACATION TRIP FOR 4 DISNEY WORLD

•

o6 nlghte •lrfare oec:c:onunodltlona oOianey puHt
orental car

ECKRICH MEAT SALE
ICIIICI

BOLOGNA

1 ll. SJ

69

FOODLAND

ECKRICH

BEEF
USDA CHOICE

SMOKED SAUSAGE $
and KIELBASA ll.

1
$249

ECKRICH

SMORGAS'PACK 1 Ll.
ECKRICH

LUNCHMAKERS EA.

99 c

ECIIICH

$ 89

COOKED HAM

LB.

ECKRICH

I LL PKG.

FUNIS

$169

I

1

•:1•······-~·-··························
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
.
RAGd.
MAMIFACTUAER'S COUPON EXPIRES 511111 :

:
1

SPAGHEnl SAUCE

ORANGE

I

1
I
I

PLASTIC

•

VM don Boi9l FOOCII Co. Rlgu PIOduetl, CMS Dopl. 336200. .1 F - DIMo,llll Rio,._ 78140 ........... 40c p1uo a,
-lng IN&gt;mllodln ... ,... .,.-van don~ FOOCII Co. Redon1&gt;lon POlley·-~ owquoo~, Co~ 1w nocaoll

YIIIU•---~.Limll.,.couponJ&gt;«~.
Goocl 0111y on procllict(o)lnllclll.-1.
----ORTAXID.

I

1
I
I

I••···································
ir:::J
GOOD ONLY AT POOOL.AICt

Yt GALLON

Valrd 5/2 Si819J

I
I
I
I
I
I

I
I
I

.

.

1QII 11121

I

FOODLANI&gt; SPECIAL COUPON

I

16 OZ. REG. OR LIGNI
MARGARINE .
QUARIIRS

I
I
I

PARKA

I
I
I

I
UMIT 1 WITH THIS COUPON AND $10 OR MORE AllDITlONAL PURCHASE• .

I
I

I

•
•••
••
•••

"

$2

•·

OFF

OFF .

'

••
••
••
••

·Rutlllnd FD

PREMIUM GUDE

.CYPRESS 1o....· $
MULCH BAGS~:~:· .
'

Rotan·ans

a·l•lmore _.

88

AND
.

,.

.

grant

011'.,....

r:!J:J

s
t

.

The pairol also investigated a
minor 11ccident Wednesday moming involving a school bus.
·.
According to the report, Julian
S. Hill, 21, 193 Main Street,
.

=~~: :~v!':!n'r::::C~

thebusstruckthesideofabridge.
No inJuries were reported, The
bus sustained light damageand was
driven from the scene. The report
was incomplete 11 press time.

Regents chancellor to address
Rio graduates May 16

- ··

Man orrested on charge

99

gram is evidence of the continuing
interest in registered nursing, she
with tbe 1994 seCond-year studentS said. A nationwide shortage of
in the two-year pogralil offered by ltN.s in 1986 prompted the develRGCC, Dr: Byers said. Currendy, . opment of the LPN Advanced
there are 122 enrolled in the nurs- Placeaicnt Track !hat - instilllted·
ing prograln, split evenly between by the summer ri 1988.
first- and second-year level stuWhile the shortage appears to
dents..
easing within the immediate area,
Last summer's Advanced PlaceDr. Byers noted that positions
ment Track emollment was 13, Dr.
natioowide are expc:aed to open in
Byers said.
signifiCaat numbers well into the
''The emphasis is on interested
firSt clecac!e of the next century.
adult learners who 8111 LPNs and
Dr. Byers said strong inlerest is
wbo have already chosen nursing
being shown fiOm the IIOiitheaS'mi
as a profession," Dr. Byen said.
Ohio, Cllarleston and Huntington,
"This group is committed 10 the
W:Va. , and Ashland, Ky., areas,
career of nursing, and most will
juc!Jing from the backlog ohpplihave jobs to return to. l(s an
cations 10 the Advanced Placement
lllhaotage for them to spend Qll)y a
'l'nK:k prognun.
year to becciine a lqistered nurse,
The reason, she added, is that ·
because they RICCive cmdit for iheir
Rio Grande is the only other instipast nursing C8lm' experiences and
tution, aside from the NeiiiOIIvillcpast college-level work."
based Hocking College, to offer
The existence of a waiting list
such an opportunity and prognm in
for entry into Rio Grande's prothe lri-state area.

Tw0 IDJ
• •ored wb en vehIC
• Je overt urns

'

Large

'

•

Accordi.js

JSjurors seated

Asst. Colors
~ ~Geraniums
4" Pot

New Gui.nea$
Impatiens
Hanging
Baskets

only iDcreaac enrollment in the
CommunitY College for the 1993·
94 academic 'fC&amp;r• but also reduce
the waiting lut of potential LPN
students awaiting ·entry into the
CollegeofNursing.
LPNs entering the Advanced

.----Local briefs------.

·: ANY HANGING BASKET
Any Full Flat or Bedding Plants :
•
With This Coupo1
Witlt Uis Coupo1
•
••
'
.
.
NO U~T WITH COUPON
·
.
••
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Hartenbach and Mannin' Roush
VOfed for the pay miles while Commissioner Janet Howard O(JilCllii'CL
Roush IBid the pay nuses were
~ earlier this year and
were granled in response to pay
incrc ucs in the auditor's and p(CISecutor's office.
·
Howard commented that she
wanted to euniine the issue further
befole agreeing on the pay illcreiSes.
-Met in aa executive lleslic:ift
to diacuss penoniiCI matkn.
· Attendi~ere Commission
President R
Hartt:nbacb, Vice
President Janet Howard, Commissioner Mannilig Roush and Clerk
Mary Hobsteller.

Placement TniCk this summer who
complete the program will glllduate

Tuesdly.
to tbe M~igs
DEARBORN, Mich. (AP)- A applied for went to 8IIOiher person,
C:Ounty ~IJ!Or I offu:e, a JUf)' disgruntled posial worker shot four the ~ef said. "J:Ie ... has recendy
View of the murder scene !fK1 odier . people, killing one of them, at a b~en mvol~ed m ·an . empl~ye.~
areas relevant to the ~IS expect· post office garage in suburban gnevance with the postal semce.
ed on Monday.~ arguments .Dettoit ibis morning, police said.
be IBid.
and presen18bon Of evidence 81111Ct
It was the second post office
for Tuesday.
. .
shooting in the Dettoit area in 1 lfl
• LeMasler, of Racme, IS acc'ISNI
ean.
.
of f~ur charges of aggavated mur- Y The gunman, identified as,Larry ·
·
.
1
der •n the Feb. 8, 1991, shotgun Jason, 4~. wallced into the garage
slaytngs of Jeff Halley Sr., 36, and just before 9 a.m. and opened fire
Two youths were injured in a
According to the report, Bwfte
12-Y!'If~ld Jeff Halley Jr., boih of with at least two auns, s.id police
one-vehicle accident Wednesday was westbound on Swe Route 681
GallipoliS.
Chief Ronald DezkLOne man was , aftemocin in Orange Township, the when the vehicle slid off the right
ticall
Gallia-Meigs Post of th!l' State side of the road, struck an embank· _,
·
.
killed, another person wascri ·
Y Hi h
1
ment and o..- -.... onto ill side,
wounded and at least two other
g way PabO reported.
""""'""'
1
~~p~oyees s~ffered undetermined A.lr~~nR~a:.~~~:~iJ:: !~2~~ f:t~~'!tc~::=.
mJunes,heSIId.
·
· M. Swartz, IS, 42279 Alfredo ingfactor.
·
· Jason wa,s upset that a job he Road, Coolville, received minor
B\lrke was Ciied for failure to
7
'n'unes' but
not-~"
control . The vehicle sustained
. W;-\SHINGTON (AP) ...:. A ler weather had bounced back as
I ~The boy::eere ~in a
heavy, disabling damage and was
Federal Reserve survey suggests spring arrived last m_onth. Both
vehicle driven by Randall S. Burte, towed from the scene.
the economy may not be 110 bad off rerail sales and manufac1uring were
•
16, 42230 Alfred Road, Coolville. ·
.
up. .
•eco~onzze
lfterall. .
"Reports ... indicate generally
"Shopper ttaffic and rel8i1 sales • '
b
.
modelt improvement in ec:Onomic were reponed to have rebounded
conditions 1cross much of the modestly in April,.following ~natiOn'," according' to interviews a1 declines in March resulung m
with business people across the ~ from severe weather,'' IICCQI'd· .
country before April 23 hy the mg to ·the summary of the Beige
Gene Tripleu. vice president of
Fed's 12 regional blmks.
Book survey, named after the color the Middleport Pomeroy Rotary
The survey found that economic of its cover.
·
Club, reported on hia nip to HmllDr. ~ H. Haqstoo. Chancel- This will be a red letter day for Rio
activity !hat had foundered in win·
inj!toii, W.Va., for the annual dis- lor of the Ohio Board of Repts. Grande," Dr. Dorsey said.
mct conference at the Monday will address 350 graduates of the
Ceremonies begin at 10:30 am.
night meeting of the club.
Unive(Sity of Rio Grande and Rio with the Baccalaureate and
Recognized with a plaque at the Grande Community College during FOIIIIden • Day Program, in which
conference was William Gilmore annual commencement exercises the University pays lribwe to the
of Middleport who received the . on Su=, May 16 at 2 p.m. on fOiiilders, past trustees, fiCU!ty and
highest acore in the nation on· his Rio G
•8 Campus Gieen.
presidents of Rio Grande. During
J~ 'selection in ·the case of Ohio vs. William LeMasttz is pro- ,
socipl
studies
tum
for
tbe
General
Dr.
HaJn1on
has
been
a
mcmbcl'
,
that
ceremony, the Doctor of Public
ceeding filter than anticipated, Meigs ,County Prosecutor John
Equivalency
Diploma
(OED)
test.
·of
the
Regenll
staff
since
1979
and
Service
clesree will be conferred
Lentea Slid this moming.
.
Mr.
Gilmore
was
ICCO!llpanied
to
in
her
curlllllt
position
is
the
chief
upon
to
Plul
B. Mutzig of Jacbon.
A IOta! Of 1~ jurors have been seated as of Wednesday aflanoon,
the
conference
by
his
father,
Bob
administrativ~
officer
of
Ohio's
the
inunacliR
past JIRSidc:nt of the
Lentea Slid. ~~jurors are needed.-- ··
•
Gilmore.
'
planning
10d
coordinating
board
University
Board
of '1'rustces.
Lentes said wllnesles may be inttoduced. the jury as early as
Joe
Young
and
Dick
Ow~n
for
higher
education.
The
slate's
·
Commencement
exercises open
Monda.
.
.
reported
on
the
Crippled
Children
colle&amp;iate
system
Is
one
of
the
at
2
p.m.
witb
Dr.
Hairston
as the
· Le~. of Racine, is ICCused of four charges of aggravated
and
Adult
Fund
administered
by
largest
In
the
nation,
servin&amp;
m~n
featuml
~
I
"'·
:
murder in the Feb: 8, 1991, shotgun slayings of Jeff Hailey Sr., 36,
the local club. 'l'bole needin&amp; asais· than soo,ooo students.
Prior to JOining the Regenll, Dr.
and 12-year.ol!l Jeff Halley Jr., bodl of Gallipolis.
.
tance from .the fund may m11ko
Dr. HairSton's address will be a Hairston held several administta·
application through the Meigs highlight of a 117-year:old tradi- tive positions at Ohio Stale UniverCoimty ~nt of Human Ser- lion at Rio Grande, !laid Dr. ll8ll'y sity, including Associate Direclor
vices or tbe Meigs Count)- Health M. Doney; president of the Uni- of Affirmative Action programs
A Pomeroy inan was arrelled early Wednesday,. morning by
DeoaliiiCiil.
·
verslty and the Community Col- and Assistant Vice President for
depudea of the Meigs County Sheriff's Depaanent 011 a ~ of
lt WIS IIIIIIOIIiiCed !hat die Meigs lese. .
.
Resisuation SenoiceL
"'..........., ccnducl by iniDJticatlon following an incident at a llailer
Junior High .Achievement B111quct
"The University regards the
Aftt;r joining the RegeatS Iliff,
;&amp;iiiiic•lY Mobile Palk.
,
will be held at the achool on May · Jl'aduadon eotercise u the most she played a CCIItral role in many
Wlllilm i.. 0me1 Jr. of 408S4 State Route 681 pleaded guilty to
13. The Ro~ Club worka with 1mjJonant ceremonill occa&amp;ion of projecls, including the cleYe1opment
the cillrle in Meial County Court and was fined S20 plus ccr*·
.
I
the junior high m Jimviding awards the year," Dr. Doney said. "Our ·of Selective E'ceDence POJiliill,
for the acmeven. l&gt;ick VMiblft Is ovarldin&amp; goal durlnJ the plaming a llatewide college preparatory
receive~
the !i&amp;iaon for the club with the 91 the commencement poaram is core curriculum, 111d testing proThe RlllWid Fire Dep.1ment has been I'NII'IIed I Rural Commulocl1 junior high and :f:d all to focus •ntion 011
t 1 jPliiD_S to. reduce the need for coinity F'ue Protection (RCFP) JIUl of $3.000. Sen. J10 Micble! ~
Rotariaollll IIICild and
. with ' and their ICCOIIIpli._.tt in COil· ~ llllllediatlon.
{D-Cirt:leville) and Rep. Milt Malone '(D-Soudi Point).,.,..
the blnquet.
cludlq thla pbUe ot their educaDr. Hlinton cliiRd die Council
today. '
.
'
.
Plelident Oene Rigp diwvn ~ . don."
·
'
on ColleJO Level Services of the
RCFP grantS provide federll mau:hina funds of up to $3,000 to
with the Roalrianl die deaiilbillty
nia ycar'l commencement is ·CoJieF a.~~ in 'New Yolk from
commllllidea with popu1atiou Wider 10,000. The DIOIIDY l'ru!n the
of havlq Rotlrilnl enlittl~ l,lpifk:lnt. ~ Mded,llec;- the 1986 untlll988.
grllliS Cllll be Uled tb llpll'lde equipment It~ file~
aa Pial Auria Pe11owL hill Hlnil inlllkudon will hallar die flnt pldA lifeloq Ohio resident she
and Ill IIIia .de!*llilentl ,With orpniMdonl1 expeues. lllinwaa the foundlr ofltollry Clulllln uatet !Jf tbe Matt«'• depee pro- . bold• 1 Bacbc1or's Dearc'e In
ina and equipment COlli. . '
1905111d Ibis fund hu been iiiiiMd . gram m ~laiRoom cc!nr~don Md Bnsliab 1 Malter's Detr~e in
the Ohio Deplrtment ofNatwal ReiOIIteil rec«vecl !ipplieatiacis
in hilllc!nd', I
&gt;:
. .
.. from die Hollan Pn!pm inldat'd
CoiDm....iclliW and her Pli.I), In
tiom 372 fire dteplilliitiita ~the 111111. or theiiiPP'kltiU,
Onull of die clob were Jake
1110 for ICiderlk:llly Ill~ COIImDDiCidou, 111 from Ohio
RCPP,pll wn awaded to 3faJIImiinldol.-owldo.
·
.Koebelllld Ropl: B nxt, aenlor e
...........
State. A member or Pili Beta
The p11111 niYiillble dirouah the U. S. Depatnwwat of Mrl·
. ICiivltiel memben from tbe Gal"The awardinr..::!plOIDII to "lllPI abe - oae of 40 alumni
culaae'1 Fcftlt Service, Coopenrive Forutly AsliMK;e Act and
Iipolll club. The 1!dlcl oftllo Hclth grldUitea of f!io
IIIII Mil- , lilliiONd a Ohio Swe'sl987 colnare ldiftinilla'ed by the OhiO J)ql~Juneat ol NIUU'al ROIOIII'CCI'
.l1!'11ed
Mbthodilt
Church
aetYcd
tpt't
DIOIUIIDI
mab
lilCIIhcf
lilap . iiiCIICaiiCIIL She Ia a membcl' of die
Dlvilion of
• ·,
.
.
.
.
.
thO dinner.
m the evolilllon of the lnstillltion.
Juclp Fred W. Crow ill of ibe
Moias County Court of Common
~ !ill Clldeied JIOO! covemp of
J111Y ~ pm eedinp m the cue of
the Ohio !·. Wllllem LeMaster for
local1elevision stalions.
WSAZ-TV(~ 3) in Huntinpln, W.Va., hill agreed to COOl'·
diillte pool coverage and to pro~ coverage for the first ~Y of
tesWnony. Only one Cllllers will be
permitt;e&lt;! in th~ courtroo'!l each
day dunng ~ lrial.
J•...., selecuonln the case sl8tted

'
.
tb
ECOnomy
may
no
e
80
. bad after· all. survey revea1S

I

one academic )UI'. T11e acdocl will

not

DIsgrunte
•
J d pos. t a I work er
·Media pof?!ingtJ~dere4Jor trial · shoo~ people,)dlls one

I

MORE ADDillONAL PURCHASE.

I

The.Advanced Placement Track
program for LPNs wis~ing to .
become R.N.s will boost tiS num-

bers by more tban double the
amount from last summer, Dr.
Byers IBid.
.
The move will bring 30 LPNs
into the ISSOCiate degree iltirsing
program, which offers accelerated
R.N. educalion over the course of

top,eoaldremcmthetallbrMcba.(PiiotobyCIIarleMHoellleb)

1

L.IMIT 1 WITH THIS COUPON AND $10 OR

I

FOR SAFETY'S SAD. Till treea are tWIIcult 10 am and 10
budle thll ooe wllicb tllreatened the Dorothy Donie lioiiSe .on
, 111111 Stree1, Pomeroy flremn brou1ht In lbe lllclder truck so tlutt
Do,rale's - · AJu, •d a ne!pbor, Roaer Abbott, plctwed 11 the

C:

P51M5-040

ANY STYLE 27.5 oz., 21 oz., or 30 oz. JAR

I

F

JUICE

Enrollment in the one-year
Advanced Placement Track program offer¢ through tl)e Holzer
CoJJese of Nursing at Rio Grande
Community College will increase
this summer to better serve the
needs of those licensed practical
nurses .seeking to become registered nurses. said Dr. Janet M.
Byers, Dean of the College of
Nursing.

I
I
I

1 WITH THIS COUPON AND $10 OR MORE ADDmONAL PURCHASE. ·

sio~ .&lt;!fRulland water and sewer
faci!iues aod a van for the senior
citizen's program.
.
Acting on the advice of Meigs
Count&gt;: Emergency Medical Ser·
vtce Duector Bob Byer, the commission voted 10 advenise bids for
the
purchase
of
four
defibrillator/monitors to replace
four aging units.
In otber action, the commiSsion:
- Agreed to write a letter of
support for a S30,000 .rape JXtval"
lion grant being sought by the prosecutor's office. ·
. - Graated pay raises to Ed
Werry and Ray Parsons who are
employed by the commissioner's
office. Commissioners John ,

.

I

MILK

- ROUND STEAK

AIIIUita.,.alna.Newso~"'"'

College of Nursing to admit
more LPNs to special program
.

Ci

2%

2 So ctlonl. 12 Pagaa 25 - •

to advertise ·projects

By JIM FREEMAN
· nilnous ma~riai in ~ay from
Asphalt Malerilil ofMarietla.
Sentinel News Slalr ·
The Meigs County Board of
A spokesman for~ engineer's
Commissioners Wednesday agreed office urged.townsh~i:s to
to adverti~e bids for 1he Meigs contact the h!gbway
t as
County Htghway Depanment's soon IS possable to make .w~J~
Issue ~o res~g projcc1s.
meDII for dust conttol on township
PloJeciS slated mcludc the resur- roads.
. .
facing of Texas Road from Flat·
The commiSSion noted that
woods Road to State Route 7, funds were rec~ntly released for
Beech Grove Road from State 19!13 Communtty Dev~lopment
Route 124 to Cremeans Road, Block Grant (CDBG) proJeCts.
Happy Hollow Road from State · · CDBG projects .slated-include
Route 124 to 'New Lima Road', · the, purchase of fue pf.O~ction
Kingsblll)' Road from Sl8te Route equipment for the Sctpto and
143 to Rocksprings Road and !*him ~lunteer ~~IS.
Pomeroy Pike Road from Flat~ mstallallon of mne dry fue
woods RIBI to Slille Roule 7. .
hydrants, resurfacing of Court
In addition, the cominisJion Stteet in Sutton Township, extenapproved I bid to pun:bue aD _bllu·

A Certlflclte Will Be Given Away At Elch Foodl1nd Elch DayI

oranllll car_

.

Pomer()y·Middlepor1, Ohio, Thursday, May !i, 1993

$35.00 Food land gift certificate ~:.:._- _1i

•7 nlghte •lrfareoec:c:ommodlltlona

•

I

Board of Trustees of the Columbus ·
School for Girls, "I Know 1 Can," :
and the HuntingtOn National Bank. •
She is married to George W.
Hairston, managing partner in
Baka' &amp; Hostelltr, Columbus, and
they 8111 the pareniS of two children. Amy, 19, and Scott; 17.
Following Dr .. H1irston's .
address, .conferment of B~ebelor,
Associaie and Master •s degrees
will be conducted by Dr. Janet M.
,Byers, acting Vice President for
Academic Affairs.
Ceremonies will conclude with
the ~mues forming the tradition- .
a1 cii'Ck: on the green llld singin&amp; ·
the alma mater, "The Red and ·
While."
'

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